2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(702d) Intramolecular Catalytic Hydrogen Atom Transfer (CHAT): A Novel Mechanism Relevant to the Combustion of Traditional Fuels
Authors
The CHAT bond-exchange mechanism can be regarded as an intramolecular version of the intermolecular relay transfer of H-atoms, which is mediated by a separate molecule (molecular catalyst), e.g., dihydrogen, water, various inorganic and carboxylic acids. A general systematization of such processes has been proposed earlier, as illustrated in the simplest case of the H2-mediated processes termed dihydrogen catalysis [1]. Following this systematization, the CHAT catalysis is assigned to the category of relay-transfer of H-atoms.
Here, we provide a characteristic example of the chat-catalysis reactions involving keto-enol tautomerization of the pentane 2,4-ketohydroperoxide - a key intermediate in combustion of common hydrocarbon fuels, based on first-principles modeling and potential energy surface analyses. A significant reduction of the H-transfer barrier (by nearly a factor of 2) occurs due to the decreased ring strain in the transition state. The enol product is shown to feasibly decompose to form H2O2 - a mid-temperature chain branching agent.
The rate parameters for the model reaction are calculated and implemented in a kinetic model to analyze its influence upon global combustion characteristics.
- Asatryan, E. Ruckenstein, Dihydrogen Catalysis: A Remarkable Avenue in the Reactivity of Molecular Hydrogen, Catal. Rev.âSci. Eng. 2014, 56, 403-475