Experimental and computational studies of hydroxyl radical kinetics at very low temperatures

In this thesis low temperature rate coefficients have been measured for a number of reactions involving the OH radical using a pulsed Laval nozzle apparatus. All these reactions exhibit an energy barrier between reactants and products and in each case this barrier is preceded by either a hydrogen bo...

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Main Author: Shannon, Robin Joseph
Other Authors: Heard, D.
Published: University of Leeds 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.566356
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5663562017-10-04T03:32:58ZExperimental and computational studies of hydroxyl radical kinetics at very low temperaturesShannon, Robin JosephHeard, D.2012In this thesis low temperature rate coefficients have been measured for a number of reactions involving the OH radical using a pulsed Laval nozzle apparatus. All these reactions exhibit an energy barrier between reactants and products and in each case this barrier is preceded by either a hydrogen bonded complex ( OH + acetone, OH + DME, OH + methanol) or a weaker Van der Walls complex (OH + acetylene, OH + ammonia). The rate coefficients for these reactions are observed to increase by up to three orders of magnitude between 200 K and 63 K and complimentary Master equation calculations are able to reproduce the complicated temperature dependences that these rate coefficients exhibit. From these master equation calculations, the negative temperature dependencies of the measured rate coefficients are attributed to a mechanism involving the prereaction complex, in most cases including a contribution from quantum mechanical tunnelling. This tunnelling contribution is most especially important in the case of OH + methanol and in this case, hydrogen abstraction products through a 15 kJ mol-1 barrier are observed directly at 79 K on the same timescale as OH loss. The association between an OH radical and its co-reagent to form a weakly bound adduct, is further explored through performing the first proxy method experiments below 200 K. The proxy method is designed to give the high pressure limiting rate coefficient for two associating reactants A and B through measuring the rate coefficients for the A(v=i ) + B reaction. The reactions listed above are revisited and OH vibrational levels up to v = 3 are probed. From these measurements, lower limits for the high pressure limiting rate coefficients of these reactions are obtained at 80 K and the validity of the proxy method is explored in each case.541.39University of Leedshttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.566356http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/3661/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 541.39
spellingShingle 541.39
Shannon, Robin Joseph
Experimental and computational studies of hydroxyl radical kinetics at very low temperatures
description In this thesis low temperature rate coefficients have been measured for a number of reactions involving the OH radical using a pulsed Laval nozzle apparatus. All these reactions exhibit an energy barrier between reactants and products and in each case this barrier is preceded by either a hydrogen bonded complex ( OH + acetone, OH + DME, OH + methanol) or a weaker Van der Walls complex (OH + acetylene, OH + ammonia). The rate coefficients for these reactions are observed to increase by up to three orders of magnitude between 200 K and 63 K and complimentary Master equation calculations are able to reproduce the complicated temperature dependences that these rate coefficients exhibit. From these master equation calculations, the negative temperature dependencies of the measured rate coefficients are attributed to a mechanism involving the prereaction complex, in most cases including a contribution from quantum mechanical tunnelling. This tunnelling contribution is most especially important in the case of OH + methanol and in this case, hydrogen abstraction products through a 15 kJ mol-1 barrier are observed directly at 79 K on the same timescale as OH loss. The association between an OH radical and its co-reagent to form a weakly bound adduct, is further explored through performing the first proxy method experiments below 200 K. The proxy method is designed to give the high pressure limiting rate coefficient for two associating reactants A and B through measuring the rate coefficients for the A(v=i ) + B reaction. The reactions listed above are revisited and OH vibrational levels up to v = 3 are probed. From these measurements, lower limits for the high pressure limiting rate coefficients of these reactions are obtained at 80 K and the validity of the proxy method is explored in each case.
author2 Heard, D.
author_facet Heard, D.
Shannon, Robin Joseph
author Shannon, Robin Joseph
author_sort Shannon, Robin Joseph
title Experimental and computational studies of hydroxyl radical kinetics at very low temperatures
title_short Experimental and computational studies of hydroxyl radical kinetics at very low temperatures
title_full Experimental and computational studies of hydroxyl radical kinetics at very low temperatures
title_fullStr Experimental and computational studies of hydroxyl radical kinetics at very low temperatures
title_full_unstemmed Experimental and computational studies of hydroxyl radical kinetics at very low temperatures
title_sort experimental and computational studies of hydroxyl radical kinetics at very low temperatures
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.566356
work_keys_str_mv AT shannonrobinjoseph experimentalandcomputationalstudiesofhydroxylradicalkineticsatverylowtemperatures
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