Large scale implementation of high level computational theoretical chemical kinetics offers the prospect for dramatically improving the fidelity of combustion chemical modeling. To facilitate such efforts, we have developed a suite of codes, collectively referred to as AutoMech, that allow for the automatic prediction of the kinetics for large sets of reactions via ab initio transition-state-theory based master-equation calculations. The primary input is simply the mechanism, a dictionary relating chemically identifiable species descriptors (e.g., SMILES or InChIs) to species labels in the mechanism, and a specification of the electronic structure and transition state theory models to be implemented. Here we illustrate the current utility of AutoMech through a study of the initial stages of pyrolysis for 3 sets of fuels: sequences of alkanes, alcohols, and aldehydes. For simplicity, the analysis focuses on abstractions from the fuel by H, CH3, and OH, and the decomposition of the resulting radicals. Altogether, there are a total of 166 input channels in these sets (more than 363 forward reactions when expanded to the full set of elementary reactions). The code successfully produces high quality rate estimates (with apparent uncertainties less than a factor of two in limited comparisons with experiment) for >95% of these. For the radical decomposition reactions, the analysis includes predictions for the pressure dependence of the kinetics. This wide-ranging exploration illustrates (i) the effect of different levels of prediction on the expected accuracy, (ii) the branching between abstractions at different sites for different abstractors, (iii) the dependence of the rates on the chemical structure, and (iv) the variation in radical stabilities across chemical families. These results, as well as the demonstrated feasibility of the methodology, should find further utility in the development of accurate rate expressions for arbitrary fuels.

Automated theoretical chemical kinetics: Predicting the kinetics for the initial stages of pyrolysis

Cavallotti C.;
2021-01-01

Abstract

Large scale implementation of high level computational theoretical chemical kinetics offers the prospect for dramatically improving the fidelity of combustion chemical modeling. To facilitate such efforts, we have developed a suite of codes, collectively referred to as AutoMech, that allow for the automatic prediction of the kinetics for large sets of reactions via ab initio transition-state-theory based master-equation calculations. The primary input is simply the mechanism, a dictionary relating chemically identifiable species descriptors (e.g., SMILES or InChIs) to species labels in the mechanism, and a specification of the electronic structure and transition state theory models to be implemented. Here we illustrate the current utility of AutoMech through a study of the initial stages of pyrolysis for 3 sets of fuels: sequences of alkanes, alcohols, and aldehydes. For simplicity, the analysis focuses on abstractions from the fuel by H, CH3, and OH, and the decomposition of the resulting radicals. Altogether, there are a total of 166 input channels in these sets (more than 363 forward reactions when expanded to the full set of elementary reactions). The code successfully produces high quality rate estimates (with apparent uncertainties less than a factor of two in limited comparisons with experiment) for >95% of these. For the radical decomposition reactions, the analysis includes predictions for the pressure dependence of the kinetics. This wide-ranging exploration illustrates (i) the effect of different levels of prediction on the expected accuracy, (ii) the branching between abstractions at different sites for different abstractors, (iii) the dependence of the rates on the chemical structure, and (iv) the variation in radical stabilities across chemical families. These results, as well as the demonstrated feasibility of the methodology, should find further utility in the development of accurate rate expressions for arbitrary fuels.
2021
Ab initio kinetics
Computational chemistry
Pyrolysis
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1203899
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