Hydrocarbon pyrolysis is a complex process involving large numbers of chemical species and types of chemical reactions. Its quantitative description is important for planetary sciences, in particular, for understanding the processes occurring in the interior of icy planets, such as Uranus and Neptune, where small hydrocarbons are subjected to high temperature and pressure. We propose a computationally cheap methodology based on an originally developed ten-reaction model and the configurational model from random graph theory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe develop a method to construct temperature-dependent kinetic models of hydrocarbon pyrolysis, based on information from molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of pyrolyzing systems in the high-temperature regime. MD simulations are currently a key tool to understand the mechanism of complex chemical processes such as pyrolysis and to observe their outcomes in different conditions, but these simulations are computationally expensive and typically limited to nanoseconds of simulation time. This limitation is inconsequential at high temperatures, where equilibrium is reached quickly, but at low temperatures, the system may not equilibrate within a tractable simulation timescale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe high computational cost of evaluating atomic interactions recently motivated the development of computationally inexpensive kinetic models, which can be parameterized from molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the complex chemistry of thousands of species or other processes and accelerate the prediction of the chemical evolution by up to four orders of magnitude. Such models go beyond the commonly employed potential energy surface fitting methods in that they are aimed purely at describing kinetic effects. So far, such kinetic models utilize molecular descriptions of reactions and have been constrained to only reproduce molecules previously observed in MD simulations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular dynamics (MD) simulation of complex chemistry typically involves thousands of atoms propagating over millions of time steps, generating a wealth of data. Traditionally these data are used to calculate some aggregate properties of the system and then discarded, but we propose that these data can be reused to study related chemical systems. Using approximate chemical kinetic models and methods from statistical learning, we study hydrocarbon chemistries under extreme thermodynamic conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF