Combustion and Flame, Vol.221, 110-119, 2020
Thermodynamics and kinetics of solution combustion synthesis: Ni(NO3)(2) + fuels systems
Solution combustion synthesis (SCS) utilizes exothermic self-propagating reactions to prepare nanoscale materials that can be used widely in energy, electronics, and biomedical technologies and other applications. SCS is a specific variety of a more general combustion synthesis (CS) method. Investigations of the thermodynamics, kinetics, and the mechanisms of SCS reactions, are not as well studied as the other CS processes. This work reports on a systematic study of the thermodynamics and kinetics of SCS reactions involving Ni(NO3)(2), an oxidizer, and either glycine (C2H5NO2) or hexamethylenetetramine (HMT, C6H12N4) as fuels. A thermodynamic modeling approach, based on the Gibbs free energy minimization principle, is applied to the simultaneous calculations of the adiabatic temperatures and compositions of the equilibrium products. Our calculations reveal the influence of fuel-to-oxidizer ratio, amount of water, and the oxygen in air on the combustion temperature under adiabatic conditions and the composition of the resulting products. We have, in turn, measured the combustion temperature and phase composition of products and compared them with the calculations. Variations of drying times for the solutions yield precursor gels with varying water contents. This approach enables the manipulation of combustion parameters and confirms the use of calculated activation energies for reactions using the Merzhanov-Khaikin method. The results show that SCS reactions in fuel-lean solutions producing NiO have higher activation energy in contrast to reactions with fuel-rich solutions that form Ni. Reduction of activation energies due to the increase in the fuel-to-oxidizer ratio could be related to the observed change of the rate-limiting stages of the endothermic decomposition of the individual reactants to the exothermic decomposition of coordinate compounds formed between the reactants. (C) 2020 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Solution combustion synthesis;Equilibrium thermodynamics;Kinetics;Activation energy;Reaction mechanism;Nanoscale metal powders