The combustion and pyrolysis behaviors of light esters
and fatty
acid methyl esters have been widely studied due to their relevance
as biofuel and fuel additives. However, a knowledge gap exists for
midsize alkyl acetates, especially ones with long alkoxyl groups.
Butyl acetate, in particular, is a promising biofuel with its economic
and robust production possibilities and ability to enhance blendstock
performance and reduce soot formation. However, it is little studied
from both experimental and modeling aspects. This work created detailed
oxidation mechanisms for the four butyl acetate isomers (normal-,
sec-, tert-, and iso-butyl acetate) at temperatures varying from 650
to 2000 K and pressures up to 100 atm using the Reaction Mechanism
Generator. About 60% of species in each model have thermochemical
parameters from published data or in-house quantum calculations, including
fuel molecules and intermediate combustion products. Kinetics of essential
primary reactions, retro-ene and hydrogen atom abstraction by OH or
HO2, governing the fuel oxidation pathways, were also calculated
quantum-mechanically. Simulation of the developed mechanisms indicates
that the majority of the fuel will decompose into acetic acid and
relevant butenes at elevated temperatures, making their ignition behaviors
similar to butenes. The adaptability of the developed models to high-temperature
pyrolysis systems was tested against newly collected high-pressure
shock experiments; the simulated CO mole fraction time histories have
a reasonable agreement with the laser measurement in the shock tube.
This work reveals the high-temperature oxidation chemistry of butyl
acetates and demonstrates the validity of predictive models for biofuel
chemistry established on accurate thermochemical and kinetic parameters.
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