The
reactivity-promoting effect of trace nitrogen oxides (NO
x
) on post-induction oxidation of a synthetic
natural gas (2% ethane in methane) has been experimentally studied
in a high-pressure laminar flow reactor (HPLFR) at 10 ± 0.1 atm,
nominal reaction temperature of 818 ± 5 K, and several equivalence
ratios (φ ∼ 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0). Each set of experimental
measurements was simulated using several literature C0–C2 + NO
x
kinetic models, both recent
and legacy, using approaches shown to lead to robust interpretation
of present experimental conditions. Coupling between the NO
x
and C0–C2 submodel
components of these models varies significantly in both qualitative
(mechanistic) and quantitative character. A comparison among the experimental
measurements and modeling results serves to highlight important kinetic
features particular to application-relevant natural gas oxidation
in presence of trace (∼25 ppm) NO
x
. Additional insight is offered by a baseline experiment with no
NO
x
perturbation, which shows that synthetic
natural gas exhibits only incipient reactivity under the present φ
∼ 1.0 experimental condition. A comparison across experimental
measurements and simulation results suggests that the reaction CH3 + NO2 ↔ CH3O + NO, often cited
as among the most important for NO
x
–natural
gas coupling, insufficiently describes the principal net flux of NO
x
species at the relatively high pressures
and low temperatures examined by present experiments. Simulation results
indicate that accurate kinetics related to CH3O2 are necessary to describe a portion of NO ↔ NO2 cycling driven by fuel fragment chemistry. Modeling suggests that
the formation of nitromethane (CH3NO2) from
the relatively large and long-lived CH3 pool removes NO
x
from the pool of reactive intermediates,
thus altering the reactivity initially imparted by trace NO
x
addition and the total pool of N atoms available
as free NO
x
(NO + NO2). Frequently
used kinetic models that lack (accurate) CH3O2- and CH3NO2-related submodels predict trends
in overall reactivity and NO
x
mole fractions
that vary from quantitatively distorted to qualitatively incorrect.
These disparities have significant implications for combustor design/evaluation
computations that rely on several present literature kinetic models,
particularly in a “single digit” parts per million of
NO
x
regulatory environment.
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