Publications by authors named "Struan H Robertson"

Methyl esters are an important component of combustion and atmospheric systems. Reaction with the OH radical plays an important role in the removal of the simplest methyl ester, methyl formate (MF, CHOCHO). In this paper, the overall rate coefficients for the reactions of OH and OD with MF isotopologues, studied under pseudo-first-order conditions, are reported using two different laser flash photolysis systems with the decay of OH monitored by laser-induced fluorescence.

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Experimental and theoretical studies were carried out to investigate the ozonolysis of -2-methyl-2-pentenal. The experiments were conducted in atmospheric simulation chambers coupled to a Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer and a gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer at room temperature and atmospheric pressure in the presence of an excess of cyclohexane in dry conditions (RH < 1%). The ozonolysis reaction was investigated theoretically from the results of accurate density functional (M06-2X) and ab initio [CCSD(T)] computations, employing the AVTZ basis set.

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The reaction of CH radicals with H has been studied by the use of laser flash photolysis, probing CH decays under pseudo-first-order conditions using laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) over the temperature range 298-748 K at pressures of ∼5-100 Torr. Careful data analysis was required to separate the CH LIF signal at ∼428 nm from broad background fluorescence, and this interference increased with temperature. We believe that this interference may have been the source of anomalous pressure behavior reported previously in the literature (Brownsword, R.

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A current challenge in astrochemistry is to explain the formation of Fe-Mg silicate dust around evolved stars. The dust is observed to form within 2 to 3 stellar radii of oxygen-rich AGB stars, where the typical conditions are kinetic (translational) temperatures between 1200 and 1600 K, and total gas densities below 10 cm. At these high temperatures, molecules with bond energies < 400 kJ mol should be short-lived, and this results in kinetic bottlenecks in postulated mechanisms for converting the observed Fe, Mg, SiO and HO into silicate.

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Characterizing the key length and energy scales of intermolecular interactions, Lennard-Jones parameters, , collision diameter and well depth, are prerequisites for predicting transport properties and rate constants of chemical species in dilute gases. Due to anisotropy in molecular structures, Lennard-Jones parameters of many polyatomic molecules are only empirically estimated or even undetermined. This study focuses on determining the effective Lennard-Jones parameters between a polyatomic molecule and a bath gas molecule from interatomic interactions.

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We have investigated the reaction between 2-methylallyl radicals and oxygen molecules with experimental and computational methods. Kinetic experiments were conducted in a tubular laminar flow reactor using laser photolysis for radical production and photoionization mass spectrometry for detection. The reaction was investigated as a function of temperature (203-730 K) and pressure (0.

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While forward and reverse rate constants are frequently used to determine enthalpies of reaction and formation, this process is more difficult for pressure-dependent association/dissociation reactions, especially since the forward and reverse reactions are usually studied at very different temperatures. The problems can be overcome by using a data-fitting procedure based on a master equation model. This approach has been applied to existing experimental pressure-dependent forward and reverse rate coefficients for the reaction CH + H ⇄ CH (, ) using the MESMER code to determine ΔCH from the enthalpy of the reaction.

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Classical trajectory simulations of intermolecular collisions were performed for a series of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons interacting with the bath gases helium and argon for bath gas temperature from 300 to 2500 K. The phase-space average energy transferred per deactivating collision, ⟨∆E⟩, was obtained. The Buckingham pairwise intermolecular potentials were validated against high-level quantum chemistry calculations and used in the simulations.

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Unimolecular reactions play an important role in combustion kinetics. An important task of reaction kinetic analysis is to obtain the phenomenological rate coefficients for unimolecular reactions based on the master equation approach. In most cases, the eigenvalues of the transition matrix describing collisional internal energy relaxation are of much larger magnitude than and well separated from the chemically significant eigenvalues, so that phenomenological rate coefficients may be unequivocally derived for incorporation in combustion mechanisms.

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The extent to which vibrational energy transfer dynamics can impact reaction outcomes beyond the gas phase remains an active research question. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are the method of choice for investigating such questions; however, they can be extremely expensive, and therefore it is worth developing cheaper models that are capable of furnishing reasonable results. This paper has two primary aims.

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The COMPASS II force field has been developed by extending the coverage of the COMPASS force field (J Phys Chem B 102(38):7338-7364, 1998) to polymer and drug-like molecules found in popular databases. Using a fragmentation method to systematically construct small molecules that exhibit key functional groups found in these databases, parameters applicable to database compounds were efficiently obtained. Based on the same parameterization paradigm as used in the development of the COMPASS force field, new parameters were derived by a combination of fits to quantum mechanical data for valence parameters and experimental liquid and crystal data for nonbond parameters.

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Bimolecular reactions in Earth's atmosphere are generally assumed to proceed between reactants whose internal quantum states are fully thermally relaxed. Here, we highlight a dramatic role for vibrationally excited bimolecular reactants in the oxidation of acetylene. The reaction proceeds by preliminary adduct formation between the alkyne and OH radical, with subsequent O(2) addition.

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The most commonly used theoretical models for describing chemical kinetics are accurate in two limits. When relaxation is fast with respect to reaction time scales, thermal transition state theory (TST) is the theoretical tool of choice. In the limit of slow relaxation, an energy resolved description like RRKM theory is more appropriate.

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Chemical reactions that involve multiple, interconnected potential wells are of paramount importance in applications of chemical kinetics, particularly combustion and atmospheric chemistry. The only accurate way of determining phenomenological rate constants theoretically for this type of reaction is from the solution of a time-dependent, multiple-well master equation. In this Perspective we address the issue of whether or not (and to what extent) detailed balance is satisfied by rate constants obtained from such solutions.

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The master equation (ME) provides a powerful technique for modeling reactions that involve at least one potential energy well. It can be widely applied to reactions with several connected energy wells and multiple product channels. The application of the technique is reviewed by reference to the H + SO(2) reaction, where phenomenological rate constants for use, for example, in a combustion model can be extracted through an analysis of the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the collision matrix, M, that describes formation of the adducts HSO(2) and HOSO from the source H + SO(2), collisional energy transfer in the adduct wells and reaction via the product channel (sink) OH + SO.

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The temperature and pressure dependence of the rate coefficient for the reaction H + SO2 has been measured using a laser flash photolysis/laser-induced fluorescence technique, for 295 View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The master equation provides a quantitative description of the interaction between collisional energy transfer and chemical reaction for dissociation, isomerization, and association processes. The approach is outlined for both irreversible and reversible dissociation, isomerization, and association reactions. There is increasing interest, especially in combustion, in association reactions that involve several linked potential wells, with the possibility of isomerization, collisional stabilization, and dissociation along several product channels.

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