4.7 Article

Pyrolysis of n-octane at very low concentration and low temperature

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL AND APPLIED PYROLYSIS
Volume 117, Issue -, Pages 282-289

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaap.2015.11.004

Keywords

Pyrolysis; n-Octane; Thermal decomposition; High dilution of reactant; Kinetic modeling

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Hydrocarbon pyrolysis concerns many different fields (petroleum geochemistry, refinery, fuel thermal stability, pyrocarbon deposition, etc.). It is therefore studied in a wide variety of temperature-pressure experimental conditions, which strongly affect the chemistry of hydrocarbons cracking. An experimental study of the pyrolysis of n-octane has been performed at very low reactant concentration (1 mbar diluted in inert gas total pressure 1500 mbar molar fraction 0.07%) in a closed reactor, at temperatures ranging between 350 degrees C and 450 degrees C, and reaction time from 1 h to 70 h. The major products of the reaction are 1-alkenes (C2H4 to C7H14), methane and ethane; other alkanes (C3H8 to C6H14) are minor products. At 450 degrees C and 4 h, the conversion is close to 9% and we observe, in terms of molar fractions: C2H4 > C3H6 approximate to CH4 > C4H8 > C5H10 > C6H12 approximate to C2H6 > C7H14 These experimental results are very different from those of the thermal decomposition of n-alkanes at the same low temperature but at high pressure. In particular, the cracking stoichiometric equations (for example: C8H18 =C6H14 + C2H4) are not observed since alkanes (except methane and ethane) are in very low quantities. This can be explained by the very low concentration of reactant which limits the bimolecular reactions. In our conditions, the radicals decompose several times by beta-scissions of CC bonds when it is possible (unimolecular reaction), rather than react by H-transfers (metathesis) with the reactant (bimolecular reaction) which produce alkanes. A detailed free radical mechanism (184 reactions, 16 molecules and 18 radicals mechanism available as Supplementary material) allows modeling the experimental results. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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