Abstract

In this series of two papers, we present a novel physically sound kinetic submechanism aimed at modeling the formation and decay of chemiluminescent (electronically excited) OH∗ molecules in the ignition and combustion of hydrogen and hydrogen-based mixtures over a wide range of temperatures and pressures. The present Part describes the construction of this detailed reaction submechanism based on the groundwork and findings of the preceding paper. In so doing, we relied both on critical evaluation of known and at times conflicting experimental and theoretical data on the elementary reaction kinetics of OH∗ and on our quantum chemical calculations and rate constant estimates for the key processes. The kinetic model under development was validated against the representative dataset of the observed OH(A2Σ+→X2Π) chemiluminescent emission accompanying the high-temperature (post-shock) oxidation of various H2-containing mixtures. To improve its performance against the collected OH∗ emission data, the rate constants of some reactive and quenching processes, to which the OH∗ kinetics is the most sensitive and for which there is a particular uncertainty, were jointly varied within the limits imposed by theoretical considerations and/or the scatter in the available experimental evidence. Thus, by refining the rate constants of these elementary processes, we obtained a reasonable reaction submechanism for OH∗ that describes the known experimental data better than previous models.Novelty and significance statement Although ultraviolet OH∗ chemiluminescence as an optical signature of the combustion process and the underlying chemistry is known to provide unique capabilities for combustion diagnostics, the development of the detailed reaction mechanisms intended for quantitative interpretation of the OH∗ emission measurements has now almost stagnated. Indeed, existing kinetic models contain a discouragingly small number of elementary processes and, apparently, do not account for the full variety of possible reaction pathways of OH∗ formation and depletion. Therefore, in this serial work, we have intended to revise the current ideas about the kinetics of OH∗ production and consumption during ignition and combustion and focused first on the OH∗ kinetics in a reacting H2/O2/Ar/N2 mixture. The principal outcome of this Part of the series is a new physically based kinetic submechanism aimed at modeling the formation and decay of electronically excited OH∗ molecules in the ignition and combustion of hydrogen and hydrogen-containing mixtures. Its incorporation into any conventional kinetic model of hydrogen oxidation enables quantitative interpretation of the OH(A2Σ+−X2Π) chemiluminescent emission observed experimentally in flames and shock-heated reacting flows with an accuracy higher than that of previous analogous mechanisms. No less importantly, the rate constant approximations for a number of individual elementary processes with OH∗, recommended here based on the critical review of literature data and on our quantum chemical calculations, are also of independent interest for the kinetics of electronically excited OH∗ particles. Finally, the OH∗ reaction subset we suggested for hydrogen flames can form the basis of more complex OH∗ chemiluminescence modeling reaction mechanisms for other fuels and fuel compositions.

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