Johansson K Olof, Dillstrom Tyler, Monti Matteo, El Gabaly Farid, Campbell Matthew F, Schrader Paul E, Popolan-Vaida Denisia M, Richards-Henderson Nicole K, Wilson Kevin R, Violi Angela, Michelsen Hope A
Combustion Research Facility, Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA 94550;
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Jul 26;113(30):8374-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1604772113. Epub 2016 Jul 7.
Many oxygenated hydrocarbon species formed during combustion, such as furans, are highly toxic and detrimental to human health and the environment. These species may also increase the hygroscopicity of soot and strongly influence the effects of soot on regional and global climate. However, large furans and associated oxygenated species have not previously been observed in flames, and their formation mechanism and interplay with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are poorly understood. We report on a synergistic computational and experimental effort that elucidates the formation of oxygen-embedded compounds, such as furans and other oxygenated hydrocarbons, during the combustion of hydrocarbon fuels. We used ab initio and probabilistic computational techniques to identify low-barrier reaction mechanisms for the formation of large furans and other oxygenated hydrocarbons. We used vacuum-UV photoionization aerosol mass spectrometry and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to confirm these predictions. We show that furans are produced in the high-temperature regions of hydrocarbon flames, where they remarkably survive and become the main functional group of oxygenates that incorporate into incipient soot. In controlled flame studies, we discovered ∼100 oxygenated species previously unaccounted for. We found that large alcohols and enols act as precursors to furans, leading to incorporation of oxygen into the carbon skeletons of PAHs. Our results depart dramatically from the crude chemistry of carbon- and oxygen-containing molecules previously considered in hydrocarbon formation and oxidation models and spearhead the emerging understanding of the oxidation chemistry that is critical, for example, to control emissions of toxic and carcinogenic combustion by-products, which also greatly affect global warming.
燃烧过程中形成的许多含氧烃类物质,如呋喃,具有高毒性,对人类健康和环境有害。这些物质还可能增加烟灰的吸湿性,并强烈影响烟灰对区域和全球气候的影响。然而,此前在火焰中尚未观察到大型呋喃及相关的含氧物质,其形成机制以及与多环芳烃(PAHs)的相互作用也鲜为人知。我们报告了一项协同计算和实验工作,该工作阐明了在烃类燃料燃烧过程中含氧嵌入化合物(如呋喃和其他含氧烃)的形成。我们使用从头算和概率计算技术来确定大型呋喃和其他含氧烃形成的低势垒反应机制。我们使用真空紫外光电离气溶胶质谱和X射线光电子能谱来证实这些预测。我们表明,呋喃在烃类火焰的高温区域产生,在那里它们能显著存活,并成为并入初生烟灰的含氧化合物的主要官能团。在可控火焰研究中,我们发现了约100种先前未被考虑的含氧物质。我们发现大型醇类和烯醇类作为呋喃的前体,导致氧并入多环芳烃的碳骨架中。我们的结果与先前在烃类形成和氧化模型中考虑的含碳和氧分子的粗略化学有很大不同,并引领了对氧化化学的新认识,这对于控制有毒和致癌燃烧副产物的排放至关重要,而这些副产物也对全球变暖有很大影响。