화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.116, No.40, 9811-9818, 2012
ReaxFF Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Oxidation of Toluene at High Temperatures
Aromatic hydrocarbon fuels, such as toluene, are important components in real jet fuels. In this work, reactive molecular dynamics (MD) simulations employing the ReaxFF reactive force field have been performed to study the high-temperature oxidation mechanisms of toluene at different temperatures and densities with equivalence ratios ranging from 0.5 to 2.0. From the ReaxFF MD simulations, we have found that the initiation consumption of toluene is mainly through three ways, (1) the hydrogen abstraction reactions by oxygen molecules or other small radicals to form the benzyl radical, (2) the cleavage of the C-H bond to form benzyl and hydrogen radicals, and (3) the cleavage of the C-C bond to form phenyl and methyl radicals. These basic reaction mechanisms are in good agreement with available chemical kinetic models. The temperatures and densities have composite effects on toluene oxidation; concerning the effect of the equivalence ratio, the oxidation reaction rate is found to decrease with the increasing of equivalence ratio. The analysis of the initiation reaction of toluene shows that the hydrogen abstraction reaction dominates the initial reaction stage at low equivalence ratio (0.5-1.0), while the contribution from the pyrolysis reaction increases significantly as the equivalence ratio increases to 2.0. The apparent activation energies, E-a, for combustion of toluene extracted from ReaxFF MD simulations are consistent with experimental results.