Abstract

The influence of the route via the NCN radical on NO formation in flames was examined from a thermochemistry and reaction kinetics perspective. A detailed analysis of available experimental and theoretical thermochemical data combined with an Active Thermochemical Tables analysis suggests a heat of formation of 457.8±2.0kJ/mol for NCN, consistent with carefully executed theoretical work of Harding et al. (2008) [5]. This value is significantly different from other previously reported experimental and theoretical values. A combination of an extensively validated comprehensive hydrocarbon oxidation model extended by the GDFkin3.0_NCN-NOx sub-mechanism reproduced NCN and NO mole fraction profiles in a recently characterized fuel-rich methane flame only when heat of formation values in the range of 445–453kJ/mol are applied. Sensitivity analysis revealed that the sensitivities of contributing steps to NO and NCN formation are strongly dependent on the absolute value of the heat of formation of NCN being used. In all flames under study the applied NCN thermochemistry highly influences simulated NO and NCN mole fractions. The results of this work illustrate the thermochemistry constraints in the context of NCN chemistry which have to be taken into account for improving model predictions of NO concentrations in flames.

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