Recent investigations of diethyl ether (DEE) high-temperature pyrolysis and fuel-rich oxidation have highlighted the failure of existing kinetic models to describe experimental CO production. The DEE high-temperature pyrolysis and oxidation chemistry is thus investigated through ab initio calculations. Geometries, frequencies, and hindered-rotor potentials of reactants, products, and transition states of key reactions (fuel decomposition radical decomposition and H-abstraction reactions) are calculated with the B2PLYP-D3/def2-TZVPD method, whereas final energies are refined using CCSD(T)/aug-cc-pV(D,T)Z. Temperature- and pressure-dependent rate constants are then derived from either canonical transition state theory (CTST) or ME/RRKM analysis with the inclusion of tunneling effect and hindered-rotor corrections and compared to experimental measurements when available as well as to previously suggested values. This new information is then merged with a C-C core chemistry model and a low-temperature chemistry DEE subset from the literature to propose a new kinetic model for the combustion of DEE. This model is tested successfully against a large database related to the high-temperature oxidation and pyrolysis chemistry of DEE, including ignition delay times, shock tube speciation data, time-resolved CO profiles, laminar flame speeds, flame structures, and jet-stirred reactor data.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.4c03356 | DOI Listing |
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