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PERGAMON Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 www.elsevier.com/locate/pecs The shock tube as wave reactor for kinetic studies and material systems K.A. Bhaskaran a, P. Roth b,* b a Department of Mechanical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai 600 036, India Institut fuÈr Verbrennung und Gasdynamik, Gerhard Mercator UniversitaÈt, 47048 Duisburg, Germany Received 8 January 2001; accepted 27 July 2001 Abstract Several important reviews of shock tube kinetics have appeared earlier, prominent among them being `Shock Tube Technique in Chemical Kinetics' by Belford and Strehlow [Ann Rev Phys Chem 20 (1969) 247], `Chemical Reaction of Shock Waves' by Wagner [Proceedings of the Eighth International Shock Tube Symposium (1971) 4/1], `Shock Tube and Shock Wave Research' by Bauer and Lewis [Proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on Shock Tubes and Waves (1977) 269], `Shock Waves in Chemistry' edited by Assa Lifshitz [Shock Waves in Chemistry, 1981] and `Shock Tube Techniques in Chemical Kinetics' by Wing Tsang and Assa Lifshitz [Annu Rev Phys Chem 41 (1990) 559]. A critical analysis of the different shock tube techniques, their limitations and suggestions to improve the accuracy of the data produced are contained in these reviews. The purpose of this article is to present the current status of kinetic research with emphasis on the diagnostic techniques. Selected studies on homogeneous and dispersed systems are presented to bring out the versatility of the shock tube technique. The use of the shock tube as high temperature wave reactor for gas phase material synthesis is also highlighted. q 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Shock tube; Diagnostics; Homogeneous kinetics; Pyrolysis; Material synthesis Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2. The basic shock tube . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1. Observation time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2. Measurement of shock velocity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.3. Single-pulse shock tube . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3. Diagnostic techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1. Absorption spectroscopy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.1. Atomic resonance absorption spectroscopy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.2. Laser absorption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2. Mass spectrometry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.3. Laser schlieren . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4. Laser light scattering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5. Laser light extinction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.6. Laser induced incandescence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.7. Ignition delay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . * Corresponding author. Tel.: 149-203-379-3426/3417; fax: 149-203-379-3087. E-mail address: [email protected] (P. Roth). 0360-1285/02/$ - see front matter q 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. PII: S 0360-128 5(01)00011-9 152 155 156 156 156 157 157 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 152 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 4. Homogeneous systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.1. Simple thermal decomposition reactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.2. Complex thermal decomposition reactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.3. Oxidation reactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.3.1. Initial oxidation steps in O 1 CH4 reaction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.4. Precursor initiated reactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.4.1. Thermally initiated pre-cursors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.4.2. Photolytically initiated radicals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5. Dispersed systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.1. Heterogeneous±homogeneous systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.2. Heterogeneous reactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.2.1. Preparation of the gas/particle mixture(aerosol) and its homogeneous distribution in the test section of the shock tube . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.2.2. Gas dynamic problems associated with shock wave heating of a two phase system . . . . 5.2.3. Determination of the reactive surface of the aerosol system . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.2.4. Suitable optical diagnostic technique to measure gas phase species in a particle loaded system . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.3. Soot oxidation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6. Shock wave initiated material synthesis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.1. Pre-particle kinetics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.2. Synthesis of Si-nanoparticles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.3. Gas phase synthesis of tin nanoparticles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.4. Production and sizing of soot nano-particles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1. Introduction Shock tube based research has, over the last ®ve decades, uncovered several potential areas for scienti®c investigation. Though the main thrust was focused on applying the shock tube for aerodynamic and high temperature kinetic studies, several interdisciplinary areas have also been greatly bene®ted. A few examples of such interdisciplinary research involving shock waves can be seen in many intriguing medical applications of shock wave focusing; shock wave phenomena in geoscience and astrophysics; shock waves in condensed matter and shock wave initiated material synthesis. Paul Vieille [2], who operated the ®rst shock tube in 1899, to understand gas explosions in mines, could not have foreseen the great potential of this experimental tool. Kineticists all over the world use the shock tube as a high temperature wave reactor for obtaining rate coef®cient data under diffusion free conditions, because it provides a nearly one-dimensional ¯ow, with practically instantaneous heating of reactants. The temperature range under which the reaction could be studied can be extended far beyond that of the conventional ¯ow reactor (1000 K). The shock tube technique has been used successfully to deduce kinetic data on certain heterogeneous reaction systems also [3]. Though low-pressure ¯ames have also been used to determine rate coef®cients at high temperatures, dif®culties arising out of 165 165 168 171 172 173 173 174 175 175 178 179 179 179 179 179 181 182 183 183 185 188 188 188 the ¯ame complexity, render the data that is not always reliable. Use of the shock tube as a wave reactor for studies on material synthesis is of very recent origin [4]. After Schott and Kinsey [5] demonstrated that the course of an exothermic reaction like H2 1 O2 ! products, highly diluted in argon, could be satisfactorily resolved using a shock tube, several other investigators used the technique to study many other reactions of varying complexity, covering a wide range of mixture ratios, temperature, pressure and dilution factors. A variety of detection techniques to monitor the molecule and radical concentrations during the short microsecond range of reaction time available in a shock tube, have been tried with varying degrees of success. To mention a few, techniques like interferometric, emission or absorption of molecules in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet spectral regions have been tried out before the more sensitive atomic resonance absorption spectroscopy (ARAS) and laser based diagnostic techniques emerged on the scene. The shock tube has ®nally established its position as an unrivalled experimental technique for gaining insight into reaction mechanisms at elevated temperatures. The gas phase homogeneous kinetic experiments carried out in the recent past using shock wave reactor are characterized by two factors namely very high dilution of the reactants by an inert gas (usually argon) and high sensitivity of the diagnostic techniques employed to monitor species. The main advantage of diluting the reactants with an inert K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 153 Fig. 1. x±t Diagram of a simple shock tube. (1) Initial test gas, (2) shocked gas, (3) driver gas behind contact surface, (4) initial driver gas, (5) test gas subjected to re¯ected shock. Ref. [15]. gas is that the exothermicity or endothermicity of the reactants involved will not greatly alter the constant temperature conditions during the investigation. Secondly, by using very low initial reactant concentrations (up to 10 ppm), the in¯uence of subsequent reactions can be totally avoided or reduced. This facilitates study of just one or two elementary reactions with high accuracy and without being strongly disturbed by fast secondary reactions [6]. Though shock tube based kinetic research in gas phase homogeneous systems, strongly stimulated by Wagner et al. [1] has been making steady progress over the last 40 years, heterogeneous kinetic studies using the shock tube are still at an early stage. The reasons for this are the degree of reaction complexity involved and the dif®culties in diagnostics. A pre-condition for this type of experimentation is that the solid phase (particles) are homogeneously dispersed in the carrier gas. Interference between the complexities of two-phase ¯ow and kinetics is another problem to be overcome in such investigations. Lack of detailed access to absorption±desorption reactions on particle surfaces, limit these studies to obtaining global rate parameters. Sensitive optical methods of diagnostics are signi®cantly disturbed by the dispersed particles. Roth and his co-workers [7±9] have made some signi®cant contributions in heterogeneous shock tube kinetics which is explained under dispersed systems. The shock tube as a wave reactor provides an excellent 154 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Table 1 Reactions studied with ARAS Rate parameters Reaction log10 A (cm 3, s, mol) a n E/R Temperature range Ref. H 1 NH3 H2 1 NH2 H 1 NH3 H2 1 NH2 H2 1 NH2 H 1 NH3 H 1 NH2 NH 1 H2 H 1 H2O H2 1 OH H 1 O2 OH 1 H H 1 O2 OH 1 H H 1 O2 OH 1 H H2 1 O2 HO2 1 H H 1 O2 1 Ar HO2 1 Ar D 1 D2O D2 1 OD D 1 H2 HD 1 H H 1 CH4 H2 1 CH3 D 1 CD4 D2 1 CD3 H 1 H2S H2 1 HS H 1 C2H4 H2 1 C2H3 H 1 C7D8 C7H7D 1 H O 1 H2 OH 1 H O 1 H2 OH 1 H O 1 H2 OH 1 H O 1 D2 OD 1 D O 1 C2H4 CH3 1 HCO O 1 C2H4 CH3CO 1 H ± ± ± ± ± ± ± 2.0 ± ± ± ± ± ± ± 8067 11,070 6492 5233 11,557 8118 8695 5172 34,277 ± 10,815 4985 7577 11,221 1500 908±1977 1246±2297 962±1705 1700±2500 1100±2700 1100±1400 746±987 1285±2260 655±1979 1700±2300 1780±2440 1965±2560 2000 1410±1730 880±2495 1713±3532 2097±2481 2097±2481 1600±2300 [40] [41] [42] [43] [44] [45] [46] [47] [48] [45] [49] [50] [51] [52] [53] [54] [55] [56] [57] [58] [58] [59] O 1 N2 NO 1 N O 1 COS products O 1 CH4 OH 1 CH3 O 1 D2 OD 1 D O 1 C2H2 CH2 1 CO O 1 C2H2 CH2 1 CO O 1 C2H2 HCCO 1 H O 1 C2H2 HCCO 1 H O 1 C2H2 products O 1 C2N2 products O 1 HCN OCN 1 H (a) O 1 HCN CN 1 OH (b) S 1 O2 SO 1O 14.3 14.1 13.5 13.7 14.4 14.2 14.4 7.0 16.6 15.4 14.2 14.4 14.9 15.3 13.0 13.2 13.5 14.3 6.5 14.4 14.2 13.5 Combined rate constant for the two channels 14.3 13.3 5.2 14.3 14.2 14.1 14.6 14.6 14.0 14.2 13.9 k b 0:6k a 12.6 2400±4100 1900 763±1755 825±2487 1500±2500 1500±2570 1500±2500 1500±2700 850±1950 1780±2285 1800±2500 [60] [61] [62] [63] [64] [65] [64] [65] [66] [67] [68] Decomposition of small molecules HCN 1 Ar H 1 CN 1 Ar SO2 1 Ar SO 1 O 1 Ar CH3 1 Ar CH2 1 H 1 Ar H2S 1 Ar HS 1 H 1 Ar NO 1 Ar N 1 O 1 Ar N2 1 Ar N 1 N 1 Ar NH3 1 Ar NH2 1 H 1 Ar NH2 1 Ar NH 1 H 1 Ar SiH2 1 Ar SiH 1 H 1 Ar SiH 1 Ar Si 1 H 1 Ar CD4 1 Ar CD3 1 D 1 Ar CO2 1 Ar CO 1 O 1 Ar N2O 1 Ar N2 1 O 1 Ar N2O 1 Ar N2 1 O 1 Ar C2H2 1 Ar C2H 1 H 1 Ar 16.8 16.5 16.3 14.7 15.0 4.2 16.3 14.7 14.2 13.8 16.3 13.4 15.0 14.7 16.6 ± ± 2.17 ± ± ± 1862 6854 4080 6915 7168 1425 ± 8300 2.40 ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± 2838 7293 4975 3300 5365 6100 2714 7130 7460 900±1620 ± ± 1900±2200 [69] ± ± ± ± ± 23.33 ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± 58,932 58,590 46,100 41,500 74,700 113,220 46,345 37,590 39,703 33,800 42,722 43,778 30,428 28,985 53,600 2200±2700 2500±3400 2150±2550 1965±2560 2400±6200 3390±6435 [70] [71] [72] [53] [60] [73] [41] [43] [74] [74] [52] [75] [75] [76] [77] 1700±3900 1700±3900 1780±2440 2300±3400 1600±2500 1500±2000 1850±3000 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 155 Table 1 (continued) Rate parameters Reaction log10 A (cm 3, s, mol) a n C2H3 1 Ar C2H2 1 Ar CF3Cl 1 Ar CF3 1 Cl C2H3 1 Ar C2H2 1 Ar C2H4 1 Ar C2H3 1 H 1 Ar C2H4 1 Ar C2H2 1 H2 1 Ar 13.8 15.7 14.7 17.6 17.4 ± ± ± ± ± E/R 14,090 28,700 16,606 49,900 39,900 Temperature range Ref. 1380±1750 1800±2500 1577±2177 1700±2200 1700±2000 [78] [79] [80] [54] [54] a Rate expressions are in the form of A Tn exp 2E=RT in units of s 21, cm 3 mol ±1 s 21, cm 6 mol 22 s 21 depending on the reaction order. Reaction order is dependent on number of molecules on left side of equation. environment for the study of nucleation and growth of particles from the vapor phase at high temperatures. Apart from providing nearly instantaneous and uniform heating of reactants, it allows rapid quenching of products leading to particle condensation and growth. The effect of varying initial temperature, pressure, and mixture composition on the size and yield of the particles produced, can be conveniently studied in a shock tube. Frenklach et al. [10] have carried out shock tube investigation of silicon particle nucleation and growth during gas phase pyrolysis of silane and proposed a reaction mechanism for the temperature range 900±2000 K. Formation of silicon particles was monitored by light extinction measurements. A similar study on the formation of Si atoms from thermal dissociation of disilane (Si2H6) mixed with different additives was carried out behind re¯ected shock waves by Mick et al. [11]. They used the ARAS technique for detection of Si atoms and ring dye laser absorption spectroscopy (RDLAS) to detect SiH2 radicals. Herzler et al. [4] have investigated the formation of both TiN molecule and particles in TiCl4/NH3/H2 systems behind re¯ected shock waves. The relative TiN particle concentrations were determined by ring dye laser light extinction method. Gas phase combustion synthesis of extremely ®ne particles (nano-particles) is a well established procedure [12]. These powders are used as reinforcing agents, opaci®ers, and pigments, and in the fabrication of optical ®bers. The high temperature ¯ame environment, in which these nanoparticles are produced, is self-purifying and the powder requires no further processing, such as washing. The ¯ame aerosol synthesis of nano-particle powders has created great interest in extending the technique to the production of new materials such as carbon black, fumed silica, pigmentary titania, zinc oxide, and alumina. Though these powders are being produced in large scale, the fundamental principles behind the formation and growth of the particles are not yet fully understood. The shock tube as a wave reactor is ideally suited for carrying out systematic high temperature investigations into the particle formation, its shape, size distribution and yield. Roth and his co-workers [13] have started on a new series of investigations into the soot particle formation behind shock waves from different hydrocarbon sources, such as acetylene, benzene, and propane with the view of optimising the production process. The new particle sizing techniqueÐlaser induced incandescence (LII) is being successfully used in these measurements [14]. An attempt is made in this paper to present a brief review of the state of the art diagnostic techniques used in shock tube research. Typical examples of shock wave initiated reactions in homogeneous systems and dispersed systems and methods of measurement used are discussed. Use of shock tube as a wave reactor for nano-particle material synthesis is illustrated. The experimental details are mostly drawn from the facilities that exist at the Institut fuÈr Verbrennung und Gasdynamik, Gerhard Mercator UniversitaÈt, Duisburg, Germany. 2. The basic shock tube The shock tube in its simplest form consists of a uniform cross-section tube divided into a driver and driven sections by a diaphragm. The driver section is ®lled to a high pressure with a low molecular weight gas (H2 or He) and the driven or test section contains the test gas at low pressure whose physical or chemical processes at high temperatures are to be studied. When the diaphragm is suddenly allowed to burst, a plane normal shock travels down the driven section heating the test gas instantaneously. Simultaneously, a rarefaction wave travels in the opposite direction through the driver section. Fig. 1 shows the resulting wave pattern and the pressure and temperature on an x±t diagram [15]. The incident shock is re¯ected at the end of the test section and rams into the shocked gas ¯owing behind it, which results in a further increase in temperature and pressure of the test gas. The gas behind the re¯ected shock will be at rest and is therefore ideal for observing high temperature effects undisturbed. The rarefaction wave, which traveled in a direction opposite to that of the incident shock, also gets re¯ected at the end of the driver section and starts traveling towards the test gas. The rarefaction fan, bounded by the head and tail of the rarefaction zone, is characterized by falling temperature and pressure below the initial conditions. The pressure and temperature 156 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 traces drawn in Fig. 1 show their corresponding values at a given time t. The sudden jump to T2 and p2 from their initial T1 and p1 is the result of incident shock heating. 2.1. Observation time The time available for making measurements on the test gas after the passage of the shock wave is called the observation time. This time is usually very short (order of milliseconds) and depends on the shock Mach number and the distance of the observation station from the diaphragm. For measurements behind incident shock waves, the observation time available at a given station will be the time interval between the arrival of the shock front and the contact surface. If measurements are preferred behind the re¯ected shock wave (where the temperature and pressure are much higher), then it is advantageous to have the measuring station as close to the end ¯ange as possible. The observation time in this case will be the time interval available between the re¯ection of the incident shock on the end ¯ange and arrival of the re¯ected wave from the contact surface. This is shown by DtR in Fig. 1. The observation time available behind the re¯ected shock can be increased by adopting what is known as `contact surface tailoring'. By this the re¯ected shock, on meeting the contact surface, does not re¯ect again, but becomes stationary, allowing for constant temperature and pressure to prevail for a longer time. The contact surface tailoring is achieved by adjusting the densities of the gases on either side of the contact surface. The growth of the boundary layer behind the shock front tends to accelerate the contact surface and this in turn reduces the effective observation time available. 2.2. Measurement of shock velocity The shock Mach number forms the basis for determining all the other shock parameters. Making use of the conservation of mass, momentum and energy equations for an ideal gas under inviscid ¯ow conditions, pressure, temperature and density ratios across the incident shock wave can be deduced in terms of the incident shock Mach number M and speci®c heat ratio g of the test gas. The analogy can be extended to derive pressure and temperature ratios across the re¯ected shock wave also in terms of the incident shock Mach number and speci®c heat ratio of the test gas. The accuracy of the shock tube data very much depends on the exact measurement of the incident shock velocity. This is usually determined by measuring the time taken for the shock wave to travel between four or more points separated by a known distance along the length of the tube and taking the average value. Either thin ®lm resistance probes or pressure transducers are used as sensors to detect the arrival of the shock front and an electronic timer is used for recording the time intervals. 2.3. Single-pulse shock tube Single-pulse or chemical shock tube developed by Glick et al. [16] is ideally suited for studying bond-breaking reactions of hydrocarbons. By suitable design, instantaneous heating followed by rapid quenching of the reactive mixture can be achieved. This enables samples to be drawn out at desired intervals for detailed analysis. In its simplest form the single-pulse shock tube consists of an evacuated dump chamber at the end of the driver section, separated by a second diaphragm. By timed rupturing of this second diaphragm, the rarefaction wave can be expanded into the chamber, thus avoiding its re¯ection at the driver section end ¯ange (as in a normal shock tube). The test gas will be heated by the incident and re¯ected shocks in the usual manner and later the expanded rarefaction wave coming out of the dump chamber quenches the reaction effectively and expands the stationary test gas in the direction of the dump chamber. By a suitable selection of the dump chamber volume [17], the entire driver gas can be made to collect in it, leaving the test section ®lled with the reacting experimental gas. The ®nal mixing of the driver and test gases takes place only through diffusion, thereby allowing suf®cient time for samples of the test gas to be drawn out for chemical analysis. Tsang [18] in his article on comparative-rate single-pulse shock tube studies on the thermal stability of polyatomic molecules has given an extensive coverage for this technique. Though the experiments are similar to that carried out in a fast-¯ow high temperature reactor (in which also products are measured either by chromotograph or mass spectrometer), the difference lies in the fact that the shock heating takes only 1 ms or less, thus avoiding surface effects and interference from side reactions. As the heating time in the shock tube is ®xed, conversion of reactants to products must be varied in order to obtain rate measurements over a range of temperatures. At the lowest temperatures, concentration of products can be at trace levels. The limit for high conversions is set by dead space effects described by Lifshitz et al. [19] and Skinner [20]. The alternative possibility is to carry out studies at high dilutions and in the presence of overwhelming amounts of a chemical inhibitor so that the molecule under study can be isolated as it undergoes decomposition. Since the inhibitor traps all reactive radicals, only unimolecular processes can occur. This is the basis of the comparative rate technique described in Ref. [18]. The decomposition of two molecules is effected simultaneously and two unimolecular rate constants obtained. If the rate expression for one of these has been established, a reaction temperature can be immediately deduced. Appendix A of Ref. [18] summarizes all the published results using the comparative-rate single-pulse shock tube technique. Similarly Appendix B of the quoted reference summarizes rate constant data for a variety of simpler saturated compounds while Appendix C lists bond K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 157 Fig. 2. Schematic arrangement of the ARAS technique. energies and heats of formation determined from comparative-rate single-pulse shock tube experiments. In a follow up review paper on shock tube techniques Tsang and Lifshitz [21] have listed further work done on organic compounds under inhibition and with internal standards. These are mostly bond breaking reactions with all chain contributions suspended. Extensive decomposition kinetic studies on organo-silicon compounds [22±25] using single-pulse shock tube (SPST) technique have revealed that the most important channel was 1,1 hydrogen-elimination. However, the quantitative interpretation of the data from these studies is rendered dif®cult by the lack of reliable mechanistic information. A set of prerequisites for this type of study include mechanism for decomposition and stability of the alkylsilyenes formed from 1,1 elimination and the reactivity and thermochemistry of Si H2 radicals [26]. Assa Lifshitz used the single-pulse shock tube to study thermal decomposition and pyrolysis of many compounds such as indene [27], benzene [28], propane [29], acrylonitrite [30]. Another promient user of the SPST is Mackie who studied decompostition of benzyl radical [31] and pyrolysis of acetonitrile [32]. 3. Diagnostic techniques 3.1. Absorption spectroscopy 3.1.1. Atomic resonance absorption spectroscopy Resonance absorption is the most sensitive among the spectroscopic absorption methods. This method of monitoring species concentrations has been extensively used by many investigators, ever since the introduction of shock tube in kinetic studies. Most investigators have measured one species at a time, though from the kinetics point of view, it would be good if several species could be monitored simultaneously. But then, this desire will increase the experimental complexity so much that it is not worth pursuing [33]. In resonance absorption method, the light to be absorbed comes from the same species that is to absorb it. This technique, ®rst used in a shock tube by Myerson and Watt [34], has been further developed by Roth and Just [35] and reviewed by Just [6]. A notable feature of this diagnostic technique is the use of very low initial relative concentrations of reactants (from about 10 ppm to approximately 1 ppm or even less) thereby eliminating the effects of exothermicity or endothermicity during the reaction. Accurate measurements with such low initial concentrations are possible because of the strong absorption in the line center of atomic lines. Another advantage of using low initial reactant mole fractions is the possibility of reducing the in¯uence of subsequent reactions. One of the problems in this technique is the preparation of accurate calibration curves for the atoms to be measured covering the desired temperature and concentration ranges. Because an intense light source is required for good time resolution, the spectral line emitted by the light source will tend to be broadened by various effects. Therefore, a theoretical relation between measured absorption and corresponding absorber concentration cannot be calculated for such line emission±line absorption techniques. A combined theoretical and experimental approach to this problem has been developed by Lifshitz et al. [36]. Prominent users of ARAS technique together with the species they measured are as follows. Just and co-workers (H, O), Roth an co-workers (O, H, N, Si, S( 3P), S( 1D), S, Cl, Sn, C), Frank and co-workers (H, O, I, C), Wagner and co-workers (O, H, Cl), Hippler and coworkers (H, O), Michael and co-workers (O, H, D, Cl, I), Skinner and co-workers (O, H), Asaba and co-workers (H, O, S), Matsui and co-workers(O, H, N, I, S( 3P), S), Takahashi and co-workers (O, H, I, Br). A schematic arrangement of the ARAS technique used by Roth and Just [37] to monitor O-atoms during elementary hydrocarbon oxidation reactions is shown in Fig. 2. A microwave discharge lamp for the 158 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 3. Typical O atom calibration curve. emission of OI-triplet radiation at 130.5 nm is fed with low pressure He±O2 mixture. The emission from the discharge lamp is passed through a highly diluted (2 ppm N2O in Ar) mixture contained behind the re¯ected shock wave (T . 1600 K). The O atoms produced by the instantaneous decomposition of N2O absorb the resonance radiation very effectively. A 1 m vacuum UV monochromator separates the strongest of the O atom lines from the radiation of the discharge lamp. The absorption measured by a solar blind photomultiplier gives a measure of the O atom concentration. A typical O atom calibration curve obtained from such measurements is shown in Fig. 3. Tsang and Assa Lifshitz [38] have summarized in their review article `Shock Tube Techniques in Chemical Kinetics ' the rate expressions that have been measured via spectroscopic detection of products and of reactants (Tables 1±3). An extract from this table that deals with reactions studied by various research groups employing ARAS technique is presented in Table 1. Some general conclusions from the data in the tables can be summarized. For unimolecular decomposition, even for relatively large molecules at temperatures above 1200 K, fall-off effects must be considered and are increasingly important as the temperature is increased. On the other hand, for many four- or ®ve-atom systems, the experimental results, under the pressure conditions usually encountered in shock tube studies, are not at the low-pressure limit. For fundamental signi®cance the data must be extrapolated to the low- or high-pressure limits. The Troe technique [39] has proved to be popular in carrying out such extrapolations. Although the methodology is very effective in determining intermediate pressure behaviour from results at the pressure extremities, the inverse, especially in the face of experimental errors, is less certain. 3.1.2. Laser absorption Though the ARAS played a key role in providing the bulk of high temperature kinetic data, the introduction of laser based absorption diagnostics by Hanson [81] has had a major impact on the quality of kinetic data obtainable in shock tube experiments. The increased sensitivity of laser absorption and spectrally extremely small light source has allowed use of more dilute reaction mixtures, leading to lesser interference of secondary reactions. The increased measurement accuracy with laser absorption has led to a signi®cant reduction in the scatter of kinetic data. A further improvement in the laser absorption approach was the introduction of a constant wavelength UV dye laser that enabled precise measurement of intermediate species like OH. K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 159 Table 2 Rate expressions determined with the laser schlieren method Rate parameters Reaction log10 A (cm 3, s, mol) a SO 1 O 1 Kr SO2 1 Kr CH4 1 Ar CH3 1 H 1 Ar CH3OH 1 Ar CH3 1 OH 1 Ar C3H6 1 Kr CH3 1 C2H3 1 Kr C3H8 CH3 1 C2H5 C2H4 1 Kr C2H2 1 H2 1 Kr C2H4 1 Kr C2H3 1 H 1 Kr 1,3-C4H6 2C2H3 CH3 1 CH3 C2H5 1 H C6H6 C6H5 1 H Ethylbenzene C7H7 1 CH3 c-C6H10 1,3-C4H6 1 C2H4 C4H4 2C2H2 Toluene C6H5 1 CH3 Pyridine C5H4N 1 H 24.8 17.0 42.71 75.73 17.17 15.18 15.15 16.61 11.89 17.3 15.95 15.57 15.11 12.95 14.89 n 22.6 27.08 215.7 ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± E/R Temperature range Ref. ± 43,200 45,300 60,380 43,500 27,900 41,180 47,000 6562 59,380 37,590 33,060 41,500 36,500 47,800 2900±5200 1950±2770 1800±2600 1650±2300 1400±2300 2300±3200 2300±3200 1600±1900 2400±2800 1900±2400 1300±1800 1200±2000 1700±2400 1550±2200 [126] [127] [128] [129] [130] [131] [131] [132] [133] [134] [135] [136] [137] [138] [139] a Rate expressions are in the form of A Tn exp 2E=RT in units of s 21, cm 3 mol 21 s 21, cm 6 mol 22 s 21 depending on the reaction order. Reaction order is dependent on number of molecules on left side of equation. Subsequently the cw dye laser absorption technique was extended to measure CH, CH3, CO, NO, CN, NH, NCO, etc. Hanson et al. [82] demonstrated for the ®rst time how a tunable cw CO electric-discharge infrared laser could be used for NO absorption. Subsequently the tunable laser technique was used by the same group for the detection of H2O and N2O. An important further improvement in the laser absorption approach was provided by Hanson et al. in 1983 [83] when a cw dye laser was used to monitor OH. Fig. 4 shows a schematic of the experimental arrangement for cw laser absorption used by Hanson et al. [81]. An argon-ion laser is used to pump a single frequency ring dye laser, which emits 0.1±0.5 W at visible wave lengths. For several species the laser light is frequently doubled internal to the ring cavity in a non-linear crystal, yielding a ®nal output power of 1±50 mW. The spectrally narrow laser light is single-passed through the shock tube about 1.9 cm from the end wall, and low levels of absorption are monitored using a two beam differencing scheme. The nominal laser wave length is monitored with a wave meter, but the ®nal wave length selection is typically made by peaking absorption signal of a small fraction of the beam passed through either a ¯at burner, a static absorption cell or a low pressure electrical discharge tube. Further details of the experimental arrangement can be taken from the paper of Davidson et al. [84]. Ring laser absorption spectroscopy has been used by Schading and Roth [85] for detecting OH during the dissociation of cyanuric acid aerosol behind re¯ected shock waves. 3.2. Mass spectrometry Use of a time-of-¯ight mass spectrometer to make realtime measurements of species concentrations in a shock Table 3 Rate coef®cients of various Si-containing reactions obtained by ARAS ki Ai exp 2Ci =T cm3 mol21 s21 Reaction Ai Ci Si 1 CO ! SiO 1 C Si 1 CO2 ! SiO 1 CO Si 1 NO ! SiO 1 N Si 1 O2 ! Products Si 1 N2O ! SiN 1 NO Si 1 N2O ! SiO 1 N2 7:9 £ 1014 6 £ 1014 3:2 £ 1014 2:7 £ 1014 5 £ 1014 8 £ 1013 34,510 9420 1775 1765 8100 ± Fig. 4. Schematic of laser absorption arrangement. Ref. [81]. 160 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 5. Schematic of a typical laser-schlieren set-up. Ref. [99]. tube was pioneered by Bradley and Kistiakowski [86]. Subsequently Kistiakowski and co-workers [87] applied the technique to study the reaction of methyl and ethyl radicals. The method has the advantage that several species can be monitored simultaneously. The masses aid in identi®cation of substances although identi®cation is not altogether simple since molecules may dissociate in ionization. Chemiions may also be found which cannot be easily distinguished from molecules and radicals. Problems associated with drawing of samples through nozzle/skimmer and boundary layer interference are still to be solved. The method is not highly sensitive, and small concentrations of atoms and radicals formed during pyrolysis reactions cannot be easily followed. Despite the limitations pointed above, mass spectroscopic (MS) diagnostic attached to shock tubes can prove a valuable tool for qualitative product analysis. Dove et al. [88] have shown that the shock tube can be used as a source of vibrationally excited molecules for studies of mass spectra. Using a time-of-¯ight (TOF) mass spectrometer they sampled high temperature (900±3300 K) gas samples of carbon dioxide, diazomethane and azomethane directly from the shock tube and recorded the mass spectra. The results indicated a substantial temperature effect on the obtained mass spectra. Akiva Bar-Nun and Dove [89] have studied the oxidation of acetylene by water vapor and its pyrolysis at 2650 K by a shock tube coupled to a TOF mass spectrometer. Time dependent pro®les of C2H2, C4H2, C6H2, C2H4, H2O and CO at an average T 2650 K were obtained. Comparing the experimentally obtained pro®les with model calculations, they were able to deduce a rate coef®cient for the reaction OH 1 C2H2 ! C2 H2 O 1 H. The formation of a thermal boundary layer immediately after shock re¯ection leads to serious uncertainities in the reacting gas temperature. A discussion of the problems associated with the boundary layer and its effect on gas sampling from the re¯ected shock zone can be found in a paper by Teshima et al. [90]. Recent mass-spectroscopic shock tube experiments have dealt with the pyrolysis of various unsaturated organic molecules in order to gain insight into mechanisms of soot formation [91±93]. In all of these studies, attempts were made to ®t measured TOF pro®les to kinetic models. An important contribution is the detection of benzene as a major product in allene pyrolysis [94]. Kern et al. also found a good correlation between TOF pro®les of benzene growth in various organic molecules and production of soot form the same molecules from laser extinction experiments [95]. The other use of the method has been to determine ignition delay times in fuel±oxygen mixtures by observing with a quaderupole mass spectrometer the sudden decrease in oxygen concentration that occurs at the onset of combustion [96±98]. 3.3. Laser schlieren The laser-schlieren method has been reviewed in great detail by Kiefer [89], who introduced this technique in 1967 [100]. It is applicable to reactions that occur in very short times, typically up to 10 ms. Since such short times imply very high rates, the laser-schlieren method typically provides data at the highest temperatures of any shock tube methods. Best results are obtained for strongly endothermic reactions, such as thermal dissociation. Because substantial thermal effects are needed to produce measurable results, high concentrations of reagents (up to 10±20%) are needed. Coupled with the high temperatures, this sometimes leads to complicated secondary reactions even at short times. This dif®culty is compounded by the fact that the method gives no direct indication of what reactions cause the observed thermal effects. Therefore the observed effects must be interpreted in terms of reaction mechanisms, which have been already studied in detail by other methods at lower temperatures. The technique works on the well known principle that a ray traversing any medium having a refractive index gradient, normal to the propagation direction will be de¯ected K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 (refracted) in the direction of increasing index. When an endothermic rate process is initiated by shock heating, an axial density gradient is established in the post-shock gas. In a laser-schlieren experiment, a narrow laser beam passing through the shock tube perpendicular to the tube axis, is de¯ected and the extent of de¯ection determines the density gradient. The measured density gradient is often linearly related to the rate of reaction. Fig. 5 shows the schematic of a typical laser-schlieren apparatus developed by Kiefer, and his co-workers for their determination of dissociation rate coef®cients. The cw He±Ne gas laser operating in the TEM-OO (uniphase) mode at 632.8 nm at which the beam has a Gaussian power distribution over the plane normal to its propagation direction. This beam, accurately aligned normal to the direction of ¯ow, passes through the shock-heated gas and emerges being de¯ected. The differential detector in which two photodiodes detect the beam and the difference signal is recorded. Laser-schlieren technique has been extensively used for the study of vibrational relaxation or molecular decomposition. The ®rst application of the technique was to study the vibrational relaxation of D2 and H2 [101,102]. Though the enthalpy associated with the vibrational modes can be quite small, relaxation is often rapid, at least for shock temperatures, and the gradient generated is observable over a wide range of temperatures for many of the smaller molecules. The available relaxation studies which have used laserschlieren are summarized in Tables 1 and 2 of the review article contributed by Kiefer [99]. Two studies cited in the tables (relaxation of O2 [103] and CO2 [104,105]) are of signi®cance because they not only serve to establish the validity of Bethe±Teller [106] equation, but also for their demonstration of the accuracy of schlieren measurements. From the information provided in the tables cited above, it is evident that the technique has made a substantial contribution to our knowledge of relaxation at high temperatures. Particularly notable are the extensive series of experiments using a wide range of collision partners with CO2 [107,108] and COS [109±111] and the set of hydrogen and deuterium halide studies [112±114], both of which have helped establish the importance and behaviour of R±V energy transfer. The basis for the use of laser-schlieren in the investigation of chemical reaction rates is the linear relation between rate and angular de¯ection. If the reaction, composition and other state variables are known, then a direct connection between observed gradient and reaction rate can be derived [99]. Since the only states that can be speci®ed without prior knowledge of the kinetics are the initial or frozen condition and ®nal equilibriumÐand there is no rate at equilibriumÐ most schlieren experiments have sought to determine the `initial' rate of reaction. The ®rst application of this technique to reaction kinetics was an extensive study of O2 dissociation by Breshears et al. [115]. From the density pro®les obtained in the study, the coupling of relaxation and dissociation could be clearly 161 seen. Immediately following the start of the readings, there is a local minimum or `dip' in gradient. At this point vibrational relaxation is virtually complete and dissociation is clearly underway and Breshears et al. took the gradient at the dip minimum as indicating the initial rate, i.e. the rate corresponding to vibrational equilibrium, but no dissociation. The coupling of relaxation and dissociation may be such that, although relaxation is apparently complete, the upper levels have not yet quite achieved their full steady populations and the dissociation rate is consequently less than its full steady value. This could give rise to a local gradient minimum, and the gradient at this point would then not re¯ect a true steady reaction rate. Evaluation of this possibility requires a full master-equation analysis of the relaxation±dissociation coupling. The values of the effective dissociation rate coef®cient obtained for mixtures of O2 in Kr by Breshears et al. exhibit extremely high precision levels which allows detection of very slight differences in rate between various mixtures. The laser-schlieren technique has subsequently been used to study the dissociation of several diatonic molecules like H2 [116], F2 [117], Cl2 [118] and Br2 [119,120]. Methane was one of the ®rst polyatomic molecules whose decomposition was studied using laser-schlieren [121]. No indication of a dip in gradient was observed during its pyrolysis and a perfect match of the gradient records with computer simulation was achieved. The decomposition of CO2 [122] was again similar to that of methane. The other polyatomic molecules studied using this technique are N2O [123], SO2 [124], and NF3 [125]. Of all the kinetic studies using the laser-schlieren technique, the work of Dove et al. [123] on N2O pyrolysis most impressively illustrates its possibilities. From an extensive series of experiments covering the range 450±3590 K, these authors derived relaxation times, rates of primary dissociation, summed rates of two secondary reactions and induction times for the primary dissociation. Table 2 contains summary of recent work in which laser-schlieren technique was used. The laser-schlieren technique has also been used in collaboration with ARAS and mass spectroscopic detection techniques [132,134,139,140] to examine the later stages of hydrocarbon pyrolysis. Of special interest was the demonstration of molecular mechanisms for vinylacetylene [141] decomposition C4 H4 ! C4H2 1 H2 and C4H4 ! 2C2H2. The latter suggests, through microscopic reversibility, a bimolecular reaction mechanism for the condensation of acetylene molecules. Kiefer, who poineered the use of laser-schlieren technique for reaction kinetic investigations, continues to be active in this area. His recent publications of the dissociation of methane [142], acetylene [143], carbon tetrachloride [144], toluene [145] are examples of this. 3.4. Laser light scattering Laser light scattering can be applied to gaseous systems 162 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 6. Laser light scattering technique. containing solid or liquid particles in highly dispersed form. The gasdynamic behaviour of such dispersions is very similar to that of gases, so that thermal processes can be initiated by shock waves as in gases. Aerosol droplet evaporation is of great practical signi®cance in understanding spray combustion in diesel engines and gas turbines. If the droplets are of submicron size with very low particle volume fraction (Knudsen Number , 1), the reduction in their size due to evaporation behind an incident shock wave can be measured using the laser light scattering technique. When a shock wave runs through an aerosol (characterized by very low droplet volume fraction in a gas) the mass, momentum and heat exchange processes are relatively weak and do not affect the gas phase properties signi®cantly. This is quite in contrast to shock waves in dusty gases (with high particle volume fractions), where the interphase ¯uxes are strong. However the velocity of the aerosol droplets decreases because of momentum transfer with the carrier gas, the droplet temperature rises because of heat transfer from the surrounding gas and the droplet size decreases due to evaporation. The measured time-dependent droplet sizes can be interpreted in terms of evaporation rates. The shock tube arrangement used by Roth and Fischer [146] for studying aerosol droplet evaporation is shown in Fig. 6. The gas droplet mixture was generated by evaporation and subsequent condensation of dioctyl phthalate (DOP)ÐC24H38O4. The initial droplet size and size distribution were independently measured using an optical particle counter (OPC) and a differential mobility analyzer (DMA). The time dependent change in the droplet size during evaporation behind incident shock waves was measured by laser light scattering. The optical arrangement consisted of four light ®ber probes, adjusted at ®xed angles of 20, 30, 45 and 608 relative to the outcoming laser beam. The scattered light ¯ux signals were recorded by photo-multipliers that were shielded from direct laser light. From the time dependent scattered light ¯ux, the radius of the evaporating droplet can be deduced. 3.5. Laser light extinction Laser light extinction by particles is a variant of particle light scattering. The method has been used by several investigators (Wagner, Frenklach, Roth and others) to measure the induction K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 163 Fig. 7. Optical arrangement for measuring laser light extinction. time for soot particle formation, soot growth rate and soot yield during high temperature pyrolysis of hydrocarbons. This optical diagnostic technique combined with laser-induced incandescence can provide precise information on soot concentration and soot particle size, down to a few nanometers. The principle behind the laser light extinction method is attenuation of light by the particles present in the shocked gas. The laser beam passed through the particle forming pyrolyzing gas at right angle to the shock tube axis. It is detected by a photomultiplier and the signals are analyzed applying Beer±Lambert Law relationships. Fig. 7 shows the experimental arrangement used by Roth et al. [13] for measuring soot induction times and soot volume fractions. The laser used is a 15 mW He±Ne laser. The beam is directed perpendicular to the tube axis and focused on a photodetector. A narrow bandwidth interference ®lter in front of the photo diode inhibited any thermal emission of the soot particles from reaching the photomultiplier window. Frenklach [10] who used this technique to investigate the mechanism of silicon particle nucleation and growth in gas phase pyrolysis of silane behind shock waves concluded that his kinetic model predictions were found to be extremely sensitive to the values of optical constants assigned to the silicon particle material. This implies that the optical data of the particle under investigation must be established with higher certainty before a detailed analysis of the results becomes possible. 3.6. Laser induced incandescence Gas phase synthesis of nano-particles is a fast growing area with potential industrial applications. The ultra®ne particles produced in this way have several attractive physico-chemical properties. Accurate in situ measurement of the particle size is important to analyse the effect of variables on the formation of these particles. The laser light scattering method of particle size determination will not be satisfactory for nano-particles because of its extremely reduced sensitivity with decreasing particle size. LII is an attractive alternative that allows particle sizing down to a few nanometers [147]. LII technique is based on the principle that larger particles need more time for cooling than the smaller ones. When a cloud of particles of different sizes is suddenly heated by an intense laser pulse, they start to emit thermal radiation. As the particles are rapidly cooled through heat transfer to the carrier gas, larger particles with larger volume to surface ratio take longer time for cooling than the smaller particles. Therefore, the characteristic time of temperature decay can be used as a measure for the particle size [9]. A schematic of the LII technique used by Woiki and Roth [14] for measuring TiN particle sizes behind re¯ected shock wave is shown in Fig. 8. The optical arrangement consists of a Nd/YAG laser, end-wall mounted quartz window, two plane convex lenses, a monochromator, and a photomultiplier. Fig. 8. Schematic of the LII technique. 164 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 9. Ignition delay times of various fuels. Ref. [153]. A single laser pulse of about 15 ns duration at l 1064 nm and pulse energy of 70 mJ was used to irradiate the particles in the reacting mixture behind the re¯ected shock wave. The laser energy absorbed by the suspended particles causes a fast increase in their temperature before they cool back to the original post-shock temperature. The time dependent thermal radiation of the particles detected at a wave length of l 450 nm perpendicular to the laser path is taken to represent particle cooling. This new diagnostic technique of particle sizing is illustrated later under Section 6.4. effect of inert diluent, such as argon, on the ignition delay of benzene was studied by Bhaskaran and co-workers [150]. By comparison of the time±temperature curves, empirical equations relating ignition delays to concentrations and temperatures are obtained. An example is the empirical equation deduced by Lifshitz et al. for methane±oxygen± argon ignition 194:5 kJ Ar0 CH4 0:33 O2 21:03 s t 3:62 £ 10214 exp RT 1 3.7. Ignition delay where concentrations are expressed in mol cm 23. The expression is valid over a temperature range 1500± 2150 K, a pressure range 2±10 atm, and for mixture equivalence ratios of 0.5±2.0. A large number of papers relating measured ignition delay to modeling of combustion processes have been published. Notable contributors include Burcat [151], Gardiner [152], Adomeit [153], Tsuboi [154], Bhaskaran and co-workers [155±157], Westbrook [158]. Shock tube ignition delay data has been related to the detonation properties of hydrocarbon fuels, through modeling and important conclusions on detonation limits were deduced. GroÈnig [159] has published several articles on pneumatic transportation of reactive dusts. Similarly the rate of ignition of fuel±air mixtures at elevated pressures has been related to the susceptibility of a mixture to engine knock. The shock tube data provides a means of testing detailed reaction mechanisms under conditions that are dif®cult to achieve under other methods. Adomeit and co-workers [153] have carried out exhaustive ignition delay studies under engine relevant conditions When any combustible fuel±oxygen±argon mixture is suddenly heated by shock wave, nothing happens for a while (induction period or ignition delay) after which there will be an abrupt increase in the rate of reaction, coinciding with large temperature and pressure changes as also emission of light. The rate of reaction increases almost exponentially towards the end of the ignition delay period. This time interval is a characteristic quantity for any fuel and is a function of the initial temperature, pressure, and mixture composition. The measurement of the dependence of ignition delay on temperature and reactant composition provides a powerful tool for modeling and understanding of the combustion mechanism of a given fuel [148]. Considerable information pertaining to ignition delay data on technical hydrocarbon fuels is available, mainly because the experiments are fairly easy to perform. Lifshitz and co-workers [149] re®ned the method by measuring ignition delay times for several hydrocarbons over wide ranges of temperature and mixture concentrations. The K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 165 Fig. 10. Experimental arrangement for measurements using ARAS, ring dye laser spectroscopy (RDLS), and laser photolysis. on several hydrocarbon fuels (n-heptane, benzene, isooctane, methanol and methyl-tert-butylether (MTBE)) in a high pressure shock tube. They have used fuel±air mixtures of different stoichiometry without any inert gas dilution so as to obtain delay data directly applicable to modeling of engine combustion.The investigations were conducted at two pressure levels, 13 and 40 bar so as to determine the pressure effect on the strong ignition limit. A comparison of the ignition delay times of all the fuels investigated under stoichiometric mixture conditions is presented in Fig. 9. For n-heptane, the ignition delay dependence upon temperature both in the high and low temperature regions can be expressed approximately by straight lines. In an intermediate range, the dependence becomes strongly nonlinear and is represented by the well known s-shaped dependence. In this region of negative temperature coef®cient, the alkylperoxy radical reactions become dominant. The sshaped dependence of the ignition delay for n-heptane is connected with a two-step self-ignition process [160]. The full kinetic scheme by Chevalier et al. [161] and reduced mechanisms by MuÈller et al. [162] are able to model this behavior by the inclusion of peroxy reactions. The ignition delay data are quite reproducible. Though the data obtained under different experimental conditions may differ, the differences tend to be small when rationalized with empirical correlation equations. It has been tried by many to deduce reaction mechanisms, and determine individual rate coef®cients, from ignition delay times. But one should be careful in reaching ®nal conclusions, unless a complete understanding of the reaction mechanism involved is available. However, the delay data can be used effectively in carrying out sensitivity analysis of all the reactions involved in a given mechanism. This can help in consolidating and sometimes simplifying the combustion mechanism of a complex hydrocarbon fuel. 4. Homogeneous systems 4.1. Simple thermal decomposition reactions The shock tube as a high temperature wave reactor has been extensively used for the study of molecular decomposition. When a test gas containing a molecule A is suddenly heated to a high temperature, the gas relaxes towards a new equilibrium according to the Lindemann mechanism A 1 M $ Ap 1 M 2 Ap ! Products 3 where M is the collision partner (usually the carrier gas). The rate of disappearance of A depends on both the temperature and pressure. At low pressures the collisional deactivation (reaction (2)) is much slower than its chemical reaction and the reaction obeys the second order rate law or low pressure limit. At high pressure, 166 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 11. (a) N-atom ARAS signal and corresponding concentration during the thermal decomposition of N2, (b) rate coef®cient of N2 dissociation. the rate of disappearance of A becomes independent of the concentration of the collision partner M and obeys a ®rst-order rate law, also called high pressure limit. In reality, the reaction is much more complex than described above. The energy required for dissociation is supplied to the molecule through a large number of collisions of different ef®ciencies. The intramolecular energy transfer is also very important. The coupling between vibrational relaxation and dissociation can play a signi®cant role in delaying dissociation. The thermal decomposition of diatomic molecules proceeds under conditions close to the low pressure limit. A good example is the dissociation of N2. Because of its importance under hypersonic conditions as in space vehicle re-entry, its dissociation rate coef®cient has been determined in numerous studies, all following the rate of disappearance of N2 N2 1 M ! N 1 N 1 M 4 However, a more sensitive method of measurement will be to monitor the rate of appearance of the atomic dissociation product N using ARAS technique and hence deduce a more accurate rate coef®cient. A schematic diagram of the experimental arrangement employed for ARAS is shown in Fig. 10, together with other devices, (an excimer laser) which will be explained later. A microwave discharge lamp fed with a low pressure ¯ow of He/N2 mixture supplied the required NI triplet radiation at 119.9 nm, which is single passed through the shock tube about 10 mm back from the end wall. A 1 m VUV monochromator separates the strongest of the N atom lines from the radiation of the plasma lamp. N atoms formed in the shock tube during high K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 167 Fig. 12. Typical measured traces of (a) S( 3P) and (b) S( 1D) absorption/concentration during thermal decomposition of COS. temperature thermal decomposition absorb the resonance radiation very effectively. The absorption measured by a solar blind photomultiplier is then related to the N atom. For detailed evaluation of the signals a reliable calibration curve is needed, see Thielen and Roth [163]. An example of the absorption signal obtained (wavy line) and corresponding N concentration (dashed line with ®lled circles) from a re¯ected shock experiment with a mixture of 200 ppm N2/Ar at 5500 K and 1.43 bar is shown in Fig. 11(a). The time of arrival of the re¯ected shock is marked by an arrow, and after a certain time delay, the N concentration increases linearly with time. From the slope of the N concentration line, the rate coef®cient for N2 dissociation can be determined. Results obtained from a series of experiments in N2/Ar mixtures are summarized in an Arrhenius form in Fig. 11(b). The rate coef®cient deduced for N2 dissociation is in good agreement with theoretical calculations of Troe [164]. Because of the high sensitivity of the ARAS technique, the low temperature end is very much extended compared to what can be obtained by other measurement techniques. Though the data covers several orders of magnitude, the rms deviation in the value of k is quite small. The thermal decomposition of triatomic molecules like H2O, COS or N2O is more complicated. They can dissociate directly out of the ground state or can dissociate in a spin-forbidden path from an electronically excited state, which requires a singlet triplet transition. In the ®st case, electronically excited atoms are formed, whereas in the second case ground state atoms are the decomposition products. A good example for this type of reactions is the thermal decomposition of COS COS 1 e 1 M ! CO 1 e1 1 S 3 P 1 M; DR h 298:9 kJ mol21 COS 1 e 1 M ! CO 1 e1 1 S 1 D 1 M; DR h 409:9 kJ mol21 5 6 168 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 13. Measured formation rates of S( 3P) and S( 1D) during the thermal decomposition of COS. The ®rst decomposition reaction is energetically easier, but requires a single triplet transition of COS (not indicated in the above reaction). The second reaction describes the direct formation of electronically excited S( 1D) from the ground state. Woiki and Roth [165] have measured both S( 3P) and 1 S( D) concentrations during thermal decomposition of COS by applying ARAS. Fig. 12(a) and (b) show the absorption signals measured by both electronic states of S (wavy lines). The conversion into concentration pro®les by applying calibration curves are also shown by dashed lines. The evaluation of rate coef®cient values for this and other decomposition experiments are summarized in Fig. 13. Both S( 3P) and S( 1D) formation rates show Arrhenius behavior, but their absolute values differ by about a factor of 150. It seems at ®rst sight that S( 3P) formation is the dominant reaction channel, but this cannot be concluded from the present experiments. The quenching and excitation reaction S 1 D 1 M $ S 3 P 1 M; DR h 110:3 kJ mol21 7 is very fast and contributes, in addition to the above direct formation reactions. Reaction (7) is practically equilibrated under the present experimental conditions. This can be seen from the dashed line in Fig. 13 obtained for the formation of S( 1D) based on the equilibrium assumption and the measured S( 3P) formation rate. It is therefore to be concluded that the present results do not allow a decision to be arrived at on whether reaction (5) or (6) dominate during the thermal decomposition of COS. 4.2. Complex thermal decomposition reactions Thermal decomposition of polyatomic molecules with four or more atoms are even more complex and the in¯uence of subsequent reactions cannot be ignored even under highly diluted conditions. The ARAS technique in conjunction with the shock tube has made it possible for evaluating the rate coef®cients for the primary decomposition steps and subsequent oxidation steps, of small hydrocarbon molecules like CH4, HCN, C2H4 and C2H6 [37]. As a typical case study, the thermal decomposition and oxidation of CH4 will be discussed. For low initial concentration of CH4 (5±200 ppm) in argon behind re¯ected shock wave, the time dependent H atom concentration was directly measured using ARAS. The rate coef®cient for the initial decomposition reaction CH4 1 M ! CH3 1 H 1 M 8 has been determined from the measured variation in H atom concentration. For a low initial CH4 concentration of 5± 10 ppm, the experiment showed an immediate linear increase of H concentration with time. The rate of K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 169 Fig. 14. Arrhenius plot of the rate coef®cient for CH4 1 M ! CH3 1 H 1 M. production of H divided by the initial CH4 and argon concentrations yields k8. Arrhenius plot of the rate coef®cient k8 for different CH4 1 Ar mixtures is shown in Fig. 14 from which the following expression can be deduced: kg 7:85 £ 1027 exp 246;800=T cm3 s21 molecule21 9 At higher initial CH4 concentrations of 50 and 200 ppm and temperature T , 2000 K, the measured H atom pro®les are curved and after some 100 ms, a quasi-stationary value could be observed. The measured reciprocal steady state H atom concentration multiplied by the total density is plotted against reciprocal temperature in Fig. 15. The least squares line through the data is M 15:4 £ 1023 exp 139;210=T H 10 The experimental evidence indicates that the ®rst pyrolytic decomposition step of CH4 is followed by reactions of the products with methane. Very important is the reaction of H atoms with CH4 [166]. Because of the low CH4 concentrations, further reactions could be neglected H 1 CH4 ! H2 1 CH3 11 With the steady condition for H atoms, the observed concentration [M]/[H]stat must be interpreted as the ratio of k11/k8 k11 1:2 £ 1029 exp 27580=T cm3 s21 molecule21 12 Fig. 16 shows measured rate coef®cient k11 [167±170] and a computation of Clark and Dove [171], where the non-Arrhenius behavior of the reaction is clear. Study of pyrolysis of hydrocarbons from the point of soot formation has been carried out very extensively. Frenklach et al. [172] have investigated soot formation in shock tube during the pyrolysis of acetylene, allene and 1,3-butadiene. Similarly Wagner et al. [173] have used the shock tube to study soot formation during the high temperature pyrolysis of benzene/acetylene and acetylene/hydrogen mixtures. A 170 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 15. Arrhenius plot of measured steady state H-atom concentration and kinetic interpretation. large volume of published information is available on soot formation involving high temperature pyrolysis of hydrocarbons. Roth et al. [11] have recently used the LII technique for sizing the soot particles produced during the pyrolysis of acetylene behind shock waves. The pyrolysis of acetylene has received most attention in recent years (see Ref. [174]) and the experimental results obtained in a variety of kinetic studies were summarized by Tanzawa and Gardiner [175,176] in a kinetic model that suggests the sequences C2 H2 ! C4 H3 ! C4 H2 ! C6 H2 ! C8 H2 ! 13 for acetylene pyrolysis. The model also predicts establishment of equilibrium among the smaller acetylenes and acetylenic radicals prior to soot formation. Frenklach and co-worker [172] in their systematic study of soot formation characteristics in shock tube pyrolysis of acetylene, have analyzed in detail the in¯uence of temperature, pressure, and initial concentrations. The results obtained by them is discussed below: The conversion of hydrocarbon to soot was monitored by laser light extinction measurements conducted in visible (632.8 nm) and infrared (3.39 mm) regions. The induction time, de®ned as the maximum curvature in the extinction signal, was extracted from the recorded signals. The soot yields were calculated based on Graham's model but are subject to the ambiguity in the value of the refractive index assigned to the soot particles. The important Fig. 16. Temperature dependence of the rate coef®cient k11 for the reaction H 1 CH4 ! H2 1 CH3. conclusions based on their observations are: (i) Increase in acetylene concentration shortens the induction period for soot appearance at 3.39 mm, whereas it has no effect at 632.8 nm. (ii) The temperature dependence is approximately the same at both wave lengths. (iii) The induction periods were longer in the infrared than in the visible region. This difference in induction times supports the suggestion of consecutive rather than explosive nature of the soot formation process. A more informative analysis of experimental results on soot formation can be achieved by comparing soot yield dependence on temperature, pressure and concentration. The results indicate the existence of a maximum in soot yield with temperature at higher concentrations of acetylene as shown in Fig. 17. The bell-shaped dependence of soot yield on temperature has been observed in pyrolysis of a variety of hydrocarbons. The existence of the soot-yield maximum and its shift with a signi®cant increase in value to higher temperatures at low pressures can be explained by the following conceptual model [172]: C2 H2 ! X 14 X!A 15 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 171 Fig. 17. Soot yield curves during acetylene pyrolysis. Ref. [172]. 120%C2H2, T 1748 2 2802 K; p 0:28 2 0:49 bar: W 4.65% C2H2, T 168723123 K; p 1:27 2 2:33 bar: A1M!X 16 A1X!S 17 where X X1 ; X2 ; ¼ collection of non-aromatic species including acetylene, A A1 ; A2 ; ¼ collection of aromatic species, S S1 ; S2 ; ¼ collection of light absorbing species including soot, M M1 ; M2 ; ¼ collection of collision partners. The products of acetylene pyrolysis, X, interact among themselves, eventually forming the aromatic species A. Which means the reactions of a nascent aromatic species A comprise two parallel routes, Eq. (16) the pressure dependent high-activation-energy fragmentation of an aromatic ring and Eq. (17) a low-activation-energy radical molecule interaction of an aromatic ring with aliphatic fragments leading to soot. There is a difference, however, between the aromatic and nonaromatic cases. In pyrolysis of aromatic hydrocarbons, fragmentation via reaction (14) is the main source of X but, at the same time, the aromatic rings are being destroyed. The competition between supply of X and removal of A is responsible for the appearance of the maximum in the soot yield. In acetylene pyrolysis, the nonaromatic species X are primarily formed from acetylene itself, whereas the contribution from the decomposition of the nascent aromatic species is expected to be small. Therefore, the main role of fragmentation is removal of the soot precursors. The occurrence of the soot-yield maximum for acetylene can be explained by the competition between the formation of aromatic molecules A and their destruction via reaction (16). 4.3. Oxidation reactions High temperature oxidation or combustion of hydrocarbons is very complicated as it is governed by energy and mass transfer as well as chemical kinetics and thermodynamics. The chief contribution to the understanding of combustion by shock tube research has been in the area of kinetics. The number of chemical reactions involved in combustion is very large and the kinetic data obtained from shock tube studies cover only the initial steps. Skinner et al. [33] in their review article on hydrocarbon oxidation have highlighted the contributions made by several researchers who all used the shock tube. The kinetic mechanism of the combustion process occurs largely through reactions involving free radicals such as H, O, OH, CH3, C2H5, C3H7, and HCO which are formed during combustion and they in turn react to sustain the process. Though the concentrations of these radicals may be small, the rate constants of the reactions in which they participate are large. Homogeneous combustion of hydrocarbons is strongly believed to proceed ®rst by pyrolysis to ethylene, acetylene, methane and hydrogen followed by oxidation of these 172 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 substances to CO, CO2, and H2O. There may be some overlap of the stages but they can be ordinarily distinguished. Therefore, the combustion of a complex hydrocarbon molecule can be explained by assembling the oxidation mechanisms of all the involved sub-molecules. The shock tube investigations have so far been dealing only with the oxidation of simple molecules like CH4, C2H2, C2H4, C2H6, and C6H6. Accurate rate coef®cient data for all the elementary reactions involved in the oxidation of the above-mentioned simple molecules is a must for detailed modeling of complex combustion reactions. 4.3.1. Initial oxidation steps in O 1 CH4 reaction An example is the oxidation of CH4 by O atoms. In ®ve different gas mixtures 10/5, 20/10, 25/25, 15/100 and 15/ 150 ppm CH4/N2O highly diluted in argon, measurements of O and H atom absorptions were monitored using ARAS [177]. Two types of O atom absorption signals were obtained. At high temperatures and low N2O concentrations, the production of O atoms from N2O begins immediately after shock arrival and the absorption increases. The produced atoms react with CH4 and the absorption signal reaches a maximum. It subsequently decreases because of the consumption of N2O and the resulting decrease in O atom production as can be seen in Fig. 18. The production of H atoms increases rapidly due to the thermal decomposition of CH4 and the subsequent reaction between CH3 and O. At lower temperatures (above 1500 K), high N2O concentrations of 100 ppm are needed to produce suf®cient O atoms. After shock arrival, a discontinuity can be observed because of the quasi-continuous absorption of N2O at 130.5 nm. It is followed by the resonance absorption of O atoms that reach a maximum value. Under these conditions the concentration of N2O remains nearly constant. The whole kinetic mechanism is basically determined by the competition of the reactions N2 O 1 M ! N2 1 O 1 M 18 CH4 1 O ! CH3 1 OH 19 The measured H atom concentrations indicate that further reactions of the radicals CH3 and OH take place according to CH3 1 O ! CH2 O 1 H 20 CH4 1 OH ! CH3 1 H2 O 21 At temperatures above 1900 K, the in¯uence of the known pyrolytic decomposition of CH4 cannot be neglected. A differential equation system comprising of reactions (8), (11), (18)±(21) can be solved to yield concentration pro®les of the species involved. From parametric studies, it can be seen how important reactions (18) and (19) are with respect to the O atom pro®les. From the H atom measurements, one can estimate the in¯uence of reaction (20) with a rate coef®cient k20 1:5 £ 10210 exp 21000=T cm3 s21 molecule21 22 which is a factor 1.5 smaller than the value reported by Peeters and Mahnen [178]. With this value for k20, matching of the measured and computed H atom pro®les was found better. With the values of k8, k11, and k20 ®xed at the above mentioned values, and taking the value of the unimportant k21 as reported in literature, one can adjust the computed O atom pro®les to the measured pro®les by varying the values of k8 and k11. The value determined for k8 is very similar to the earlier experimental value of Olschewski et al. [179]. The results obtained for the chain branching reaction (20) is shown in Fig. 18. Measured H and O atom pro®les and ®tted curves: 10/5 ppm CH4/N2O/Ar, T 2055 K; p 2:09 bar: K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 173 Fig. 19. Temperature dependence of the rate coef®cient for the reaction O 1 CH4 ! OH 1 CH3. Fig. 19. The least squares ®t through the data gives k19 6:8 £ 10210 exp 27030=T cm23 s21 molecule21 23 The activation temperature of reaction (19) is much higher than the values of the low temperature experiments of Wong and Potter [180] and Westenberg and de Haas [181]. The measured coef®cient k18 is very similar to the value of Brabbs and Brokaw [182]. The non-Arrhenius behavior of k19 is obvious from the comparison of low temperature and high temperature data. In the entire temperature range 300±2200 K, one can describe k19 by the equation k19 1:94 £ 10217 T 2:075 exp 23840=T cm3 s21 molecule21 24 Thus, it is possible, as in the case of CH4 1 O to determine from shock tube measurements accurate rate coef®cient data for the initial decomposition and oxidation steps of other simple hydrocarbons also. 4.4. Precursor initiated reactions A complex reaction, after its initiation, is propagated through the participation of several reactive radical species. To be able to describe the rate at which the overall reaction progresses, one needs precise information on the rate coef®cient data of radical±radical or radical±molecule reactions. A precursor molecule can be made to supply these radicals of interest either by thermal decomposition due to shock heating or by laser photolysis. After the test gas has been `seeded' with the reactive radicals, the speci®c reaction of interest can be monitored using, e.g. ARAS and its rate coef®cient determined. It is of course obvious that the radical formation reaction must be very fast compared to the reaction under investigation. 4.4.1. Thermally initiated pre-cursors The thermal method of producing radical species in a shock tube involves use of a pre-cursor molecule which readily decomposes by thermal reaction. If it is ensured that the radical formation is very much faster than the reaction under investigation, then the complexity due to coupling of the radical forming step with other simultaneous pyrolysis reactions can be minimized. A good example for this type of reaction is the reaction of Si atoms with CO Si 1 CO ! SiO 1 C; DR h 276:1 kJ mol21 25 The reaction was studied by Mick and Roth [183] in mixtures containing 0.75±20 ppm SiH4 and 0.2±5% CO diluted in argon at temperatures 2720±5190 K using Si atom ARAS. A sample trace recorded for Si absorption in mixtures without and with CO is shown in Fig. 20(a). Immediately behind the re¯ected shock wave, the precursor SiH4 decomposes almost instantaneously to form Si atoms and H2 at a constant level. In the mixture with CO, the silicon atoms in turn react as per reaction (25) resulting in a decrease in Si absorption. The kinetic evaluation of the above type of absorption signal is facilitated by the fact that the disappearance of Si proceeds under ®rst order conditions, because the CO concentration is practically constant d lnSi=dt 2k25 CO0 26 The silicon atom concentration can be directly related to the measured absorption via the modi®ed Lambert± Beer Law with a concentration exponent n 0:8: The above equation when rewritten, yields d ln {2ln 1 2 A1=n dy 2k23 CO0 dt dt 27 with A being the measured fractional Si absorption. Fig. 20(b) shows the property y as a function of reaction time. 174 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 20. (a) Si atom absorption measured in mixtures of Ar and 1 ppm SiH4 without and with CO addition, T 3600 K; p 0:8 bar: (b) Evaluation of the absorption signal by the ®rst order method. The linear behavior of y con®rms the ®rst order assumption for reaction (25) and allows determination of the rate coef®cient from the slope. A summary of the rate coef®cients thus obtained is shown in the Arrhenius diagram on Fig. 21. This also includes results of C atom measurements. The standard deviation of the data due to experimental scatter is very low at 110% Rate coef®cients of several silicon reactions obtained by Roth et al. are summarized in Table 3. 4.4.2. Photolytically initiated radicals The method of generating radical species by photolysis and following their further reactions is an old and well established technique in chemical kinetics, mostly used in room temperature static cells. Earlier investigators have used ¯ash lamps to photolyze precursor molecules in shock-heated gases. With the availability of high intensity pulsed UV lasers, which have a higher spectral intensity and a greater monochromacity compared to ¯ash lamps, laser photolysis has been preferred [81,184]. Compared to the thermally (chemically) formed radicals, described in the previous section, pulsed laser photolysis is an effective and instantaneous source allowing direct preparation of radical species widely independent of the properties of the shocked gas. An extension to lower temperatures is therefore un-problematic. A disadvantage is that the energy transfer or the absorption coef®cient during photolysis is not known in detail, rendering prediction of the identity or the energy states of the photofragments produced more dif®cult. The following reaction belonging to this category was K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 175 Fig. 21. Rate coef®cient for the reaction Si 1 CO ! SiO 1 C. investigated by Woiki and Roth [185]: S 1 H2 ! HS 1 H; DR h 80:3 kJ mol21 28 S atoms were photolytically produced by an excimer laser pulse at 193 nm in mixtures of 25 or 30 ppm CS2 and 1000±4000 ppm H2, diluted in Ar. The laser was coupled into the measurement plane of the shock tube through an end plate made of quartz glass. The experimental arrangement is shown in Fig. 10. The original rectangular beam was expanded by a cylindrical lense allowing illumination of the whole ARAS diagnostic path. The temperature range of the experiments was 1260±1840 K. Progress of the chemical reaction was studied by ARAS monitoring of S( 3P) at 147.4 nm. A typical absorption pro®le obtained is shown in Fig. 22(a). The arrival of the re¯ected shock, which is associated with a temperature discontinuity does not initiate any measurable S atom formation in the mixture. Only the laser photolysis pulse of about 13 ns duration, which was passed through the mixture 50 ms after the arrival of the re¯ected shock wave, causes a step like peak in S atom absorption. Subsequently the signal decreases due to S consumption by its reaction with H2. Data reduction could again be achieved by assuming ®rst-order decay of S. Results of all the experiments are summarized in the Arrhenius plot of Fig. 22(b). The data can be approximated by an Arrhenius expression of the form K cm3 mol21 s21 k 6 £ 1014 exp 212;070 29 T In Fig. 22(b) results obtained from another series of experiments, where the S atoms were thermally initiated by the pyrolysis of COS, are also included. Both the data sets agree very well and this illustrates the high potential of photolysis experiments at low temperatures and pyrolysis at high temperatures for the initiation of radical±radical or radical±molecule reactions. 5. Dispersed systems 5.1. Heterogeneous±homogeneous systems Certain reactive substances, originally in the form of ®nely dispersed powder, when subject to shock heating, evaporate nearly instantaneously and within a short period follow all the characteristics of a homogeneous system. A typical example for this behaviour is the thermal decomposition of fullerene (C60). This material, which is known to be a new carbon modi®cation, exists in the form of soot-like black powder, at room temperatures. There is a growing interest from industrial as well as scienti®c points of view, to evaluate the thermal stability and chemical resistance of this potential material at high temperatures. Sommer et al. [186] have studied the thermal decomposition of C60 at temperatures above 2500 K behind re¯ected shock waves and measured C2 emission using ring dye laser diagnostic, shown in Fig. 23. The C60 powder was dispersed in argon using the expansion wave driven aerosol generator (Fig. 24) and ®lled into the shock tube where it was heated by the shock wave. Time dependent C2 concentration in the post-shock mixture was deduced from the intensity 176 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 22. (a) S-atom ARAS signal after pyrolysis of a CS2/H2/Ar mixture, (b) rate coef®cient of reaction S 1 H2. K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 177 Fig. 23. Experimental arrangement for measurements with RDLS and infrared diode laser spectroscopy (IRDS). difference between the incident and transmitted laser light. One dif®culty with the data deduction was the quantitative characterization of the amount of fullerene, which was a dispersed powder in the pre-shock situation and a vapour in the post-shock reacting mixture. This problem was overcome by performing a separate set of experiments under identical conditions with C60/Ar mixtures enriched with 6% O2 and measuring the products CO and CO2 with a tunable IR diode laser. Assuming a complete oxidation of all carbonaceous material, which is justi®ed under the present high temperature conditions, the post-shock C60 concentration was determined from the measured oxidation products. Based on the C2 measurements, a simple C2 abstraction step followed by other reactions was proposed: C60 1 M ! C2 1 C58 1 M 30 An apparent activation energy for the above decomposition step was approximated by the expression kapp 4:25 £ 1012 exp 2516 kJ mol21 =RT s21 Fig. 24. Aerosol generator with particle analyzing system. 31 178 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 25. Schematic of droplet evaporation behind a stationary shock wave. 5.2. Heterogeneous reactions Reactions involving ultra-®ne solid particles that are homogeneously dispersed in a gas mixture at high temperature are of interest in many technical applications as in pulverized fuel combustion, soot oxidation, dust explosions or reduction of SO2 by limestone particles. The complexity involved in analyzing such heterogeneous reactions is very much higher than in the case of gas phase reactions. One way of tackling the problem will be to consider the dispersed system as a pseudo-homogeneous system (provided the system consists of only a dilute suspension of ultra-®ne particles) and apply all the principles which are valid for a gas. Under these conditions, the shock tube lends itself as an ideal tool for investigating reactive aerosol systems. The mixture containing ultra-®ne particles can be heated by a shock wave, thus initiating chemical reactions, which can be monitored by optical methods. The combination of aerosol physics and shock wave technology, offers an ideal environment for the study of a variety of problems including droplet evaporation at well de®ned high temperature conditions. A shock wave running through an aerosol disturbs the quasi-equilibrium of the gas particle mixture and initiates relaxation processes. As an aerosol is characterized by a very low particle volume fraction, the mass, momentum and heat exchange processes are relatively weak and do not affect the gas phase properties signi®cantly. The situation of a stationary shock wave in an aerosol with low droplet volume concentration is shown schematically in Fig. 25 [187]. The shock front can be assumed as a gas phase discontinuity. Because of the very low volume fraction of the suspended droplets, the gas properties are nearly independent of the droplet processes and can be assumed to be constant. The behaviour of the particle cloud going through the wave front is quite different and more complex. The droplets are not directly in¯uenced by the gas phase discontinuity. Their velocity decreases because of the momentum transfer with the carrier gas, the droplet temperature rises because of heat transfer from the surrounding gas, and the droplet size decreases during the subsequent evaporation processes. K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 The particle behaviour in the shock wave relaxation zone is determined by three relaxing quantities namely, the droplet velocity vp, the droplet temperature Tp (assumed to be uniform for small Biot numbers), and the droplet radius rp, all having different characteristic relaxation lengths (or times). The experimental conditions are chosen in such a manner that the relaxation length (time) for the evaporation process is much longer than for other exchange processes. In this case, the measured time dependent particle sizes behind shock waves can easily be interpreted in terms of evaporation rates. However, there are some limitations and special problems in dealing with the study of dispersed systems which are discussed below. 5.2.1. Preparation of the gas/particle mixture(aerosol) and its homogeneous distribution in the test section of the shock tube The dispersibility of a powder in a gas depends on the material, particle size, shape and moisture content. Hydrophobic materials such as talc are easier to disperse than are hydrophilic materials like quartz and limestone. To fully disperse a powder, it is necessary to supply suf®cient energy to a small volume of the bulk material and to separate the particles by overcoming van der Waals forces of attraction. From theoretical considerations of inter-particle forces, it is possible to conclude that the dispersibility of powdered material increases with particle size. Particles of very small sizes are more dif®cult to disperse than those of larger sizes. A practical method of dispersing ultra®ne powders homogeneously is to use a powder dispenser. A schematic of the aerosol generator developed by Rajadurai et al. [188] is shown in Fig. 24. It is basically a small glass shock tube of 50 mm inner diameter connected to a spherical glass vessel of 20 l volume to store the generated aerosol. The powder to be dispersed is placed on a ¯at plate which is inserted into the low pressure section near the diaphragm. Either the incident shock or expansion wave can be used for dispersing the powder based on the initial pressure ratio across the diaphragm. For expansion wave based dispersion, the pressure in the low pressure section should be kept low (10 22 mbar) and the dispersion gas (Ar) pressure in the driver section increased until the diaphragm bursts. For shock wave dispersion, the low pressure section is also ®lled with argon up to a pressure of 500 mbar and the driver section with the dispersion gas (Ar) up to about 2 bar. After bursting of the diaphragm, the generated expansion or shock wave disperses the powder uniformly. The glass vessel is ®nally ®lled to atmospheric pressure with argon. The quality of particle dispersion is evaluated by conventional sampling on nuclepore ®lters [189] or using a scanning electron microscope (SEM) together with a matched imaging system. 179 5.2.2. Gas dynamic problems associated with shock wave heating of a two phase system The non-homogeneity due to solid-gas mixture is overcome to a large extent by choosing sub-micrometer particle sizes with a low overall particle loading. By this, the effect of particles on the physical properties of the ¯uid will be minimum. This assumption enables the temperature and pressure of the particle/gas mixture to rise instantaneously behind the shock wave. Because of the small size of the particles, the slip ¯ow effects between the particle and gas are very short and therefore the particles are also heated instantly to the same value as the gas. The gas phase reactants initially present or formed during a fast homogeneous process can react with equal facility with the sub-micron particles as with other gas phase reactants. 5.2.3. Determination of the reactive surface of the aerosol system The rate of a heterogeneous reaction depends, besides other surface properties, on the size or the reaction area. This requires the particles to be characterized with respect to these properties. This can be done using either laser light scattering, laser light extinction or LII techniques described earlier. 5.2.4. Suitable optical diagnostic technique to measure gas phase species in a particle loaded system The problem of determining the progress of a heterogeneous reaction by measuring either the product species formed or the reduction in reactant species concentration can be achieved by using, e.g. tunable IR-diode laser absorption spectroscopy. This is made possible due to the fact that the actual interference by the particles is small, as light extinction by small particles is weak in the infrared region. The optical arrangement used by Brandt and Roth [190] is shown in Fig. 23. It consists of a pulsed, tunable IR-diode laser, the shock tube arranged as a multipass optical cell, a 0.5 m infrared monochromator for mode ®ltering and a detection system. The laser is pulsed with a frequency of 25 kHz and can additionally be tuned in each pulse over one or two lines, thus producing a series of highly resolved absorption lines, from which time dependent species concentrations can be determined. It was recently shown that O atom ARAS can be used to follow the heterogeneous reaction of O atoms in gases containing dispersed soot particles. Because of the high sensitivity of the spectroscopic technique, the amount of dispersed particles can be very low. Nevertheless, the light extinction by the particles must be taken into account. 5.3. Soot oxidation A typical example of a thermally initiated reaction in a 180 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 26. (a) Example of a pulsed IR diode laser scans in a shock heated soot/N2 O/Ar mixture showing increasing CO spectral absorptions, (b) corresponding CO concentration. dispersed system is the oxidation of soot particles by O atoms. The expected oxidation products are CO and CO2, but the only clearly detectable product on the time scale of the present experiment using the shock tube was CO. The oxidation proceeds mainly via the global heterogeneous reaction Cs 1 O ! CO 32 where Cs represents the solid carbon in the soot particles. The O atoms were generated by the fast thermal decomposition of N2O that was present in the initial gas/particle mixture. According to the above reaction, the rate of formation of CO is dco a0 Z0 ap dt 33 where Z0 1=4C 0 O: In this equation, a0 ; Z0 and ap are the reaction probability of O atoms with the soot surface, the collision number of O atoms per unit time and area, and the reacting particle surface area per unit volume of suspension, respectively. The collision number Z0 can be calculated from the Hertz±Knudsen equation with C 0 being the mean thermal velocity of O atoms. The required kinetic property not K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 181 Fig. 27. Reaction probabilities of soot oxidation by O, OH, and NO obtained from shock tube experiments. known in the above equation is a0 ; which can be determined from the measured properties [CO] and ap for a given [O]. A typical example of an individual shock tube experiment with a soot/N2O/Ar mixture at 2490 K is shown in Fig. 26. The laser was tuned to a wavelength range close to the (0.1) P8 line of CO and the pulse frequency was about 25 KHz. The arrival of the shock front is indicated on Fig. 26(a). In the traces on the lower part of Fig. 26(a), selected scans of the same experiment are shown in more detail on an enlarged scale. The strong absorption lines on scan A were caused by spectral absorption of N2O under pre-shock conditions. Beginning with the ®rst post-shock scans, sharp spectral lines of CO appear showing increasing absorption. These illustrate the formation of an increasing amount of CO during the heterogeneous soot oxidation. The reduction of the spectroscopic data to CO concentration can be done using the Lambert±Beer law. The necessary spectral absorption coef®cient depends on the line strength and the line shape factor. The latter was determined by ®tting a Voigt pro®le to the measured absorption line. Taking this into account, the sequence of absorptions obtained can be transformed into a time dependent CO concentration, as illustrated in Fig. 26(b). From the initial slope together with the above equation, or from computer simulation of this and other oxidation experiments, reaction probabilities a 0 were determined. A summary of the results is given in the Arrhenius diagram of Fig. 27, which also contains results of soot oxidation by OH and NO. The a 0 values obtained for O atom reaction are nearly independent of temperature and can be approximated by a mean value a0 0:23: For more details see Ref. [191]. 6. Shock wave initiated material synthesis Synthesis of nanoparticles is an essential part of nanotechnology, which is concerned with the development and utilization of structures and devices scaling between individual molecules and features below 100 nm. Nanotechnology is recognized like information technology and biotechnology as having a driving potential for the beginning century with tremendous economic impact. Thin ®lms, lateral structures and very small particles are examples of nanotechnology having different geometrical dimension. These structures have novel properties compared to the bulk materials due to size effects. Nanotechnology also encompasses the possibility of building novel structures by controlled atomic and molecular engineering. Nanoparticles are nanostructures with reduced size in all three dimensions, which is referred to as reduction from 3D to 0D. Because of the large surface to volume ratio, boundary surface and quantum effects become dominant. Nanoparticles therefore have interesting thermodynamic, magnetic, optical, electronic, chemical, and mechanical properties when compared to bulk materials. This is mainly due to their limited size, where the number of atoms or molecules on the partiale surface is comparable or larger than those inside the particle. Layers or folders of nanoparticles dispersed in a solid matrix or consolidated are known as nanostructured, nanocrystalline, or nanophase materials. They are charecterized by a large number of grain boundaries with a characteristic nanometer length scale. These materials also show interesting novel properties such as alloying of normally immiscible materials, higher critical superconductor transition temperature, ductile ceramics, super-magnetic or giant magneto-resistance (GMR). 182 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Nanoparticle synthesis techniques can be broadly classi®ed into two categories namely: (a) colloidal systems where stabilization is used to promote coagulation (wet methods); (b) gas phase systems or aerosol synthesis where either physical or chemical methods are used to to produce nanoparticles. Under physical methods, the solid is evaporated and recondensed into particle form. Chemical methods, also called reactive aerosol synthesis, is very similar to combustion. Depending on the precursor material, it can be processed as spray pyrolysis,in which a reagent, dissolved in a solvent is delivered to a reactor. The solvent evaporates and the involatile precursor undergoes reaction to form particles of the ®nal form. Alternatively, nanoparticle formation can also proceed through a self sustaining or pyrolysis type of reaction where the condensing vapours nucleate and grow to form the ®nal nanoparticles. The shock tube provides an excellent environment for investigating nucleation and growth of nanoparticles from the vapour phase at high temperatures. It provides nearly instantaneous and uniform heating of reactants, rapid quenching of products and importantly, the initial reaction temperature, pressure and mixture composition can be selected independently over wide ranges [192]. These features make it possible, for instance, to isolate the effect of reaction temperature on particle growth characteristics. 6.1. Pre-particle kinetics High temperature gas phase synthesis of particles is very much dependent on the homogeneous gas phase chemical kinetics of the precursor reactions that precede particle formation. Several silicon containing materials are used in producing silicon precursor for chemical vapour deposition (CVD) or for the generation of ceramic particles by gas phase combustion synthesis. But lack of reliable thermochemical data and reaction rate coef®cients come in the way of optimising the production processes. Systematic investigation into the effects of temperature, pressure and concentration of the pre-particle gas phase kinetics is essential to steer the particle production processes in a ¯uidized ¯ame reactor. As mentioned earlier, the shock tube as a high temperature wave reactor coupled with highly sensitive diagnostic techniques such as atomic resonance absorption, ring dye-laser absorption and laser extinction enable study of isolated reaction steps that play lead roles in the ®nal particle formation. Kunz and Roth [193] have studied the dissociation of SiCl4 behind re¯ected shock waves by monitoring Cl and Si atom concentrations using ARAS. Chlorinated silanes like SiCl4 are widely used as precursors in high temperature gas phase reactors for the synthesis of ceramic powders like SIC, Si3N4 and SiO2. At temperatures of 2500 K and above, thermal decomposition of SiCl4 is the predominant step SiCl4 1 Ar ! SiCl3 1 Cl 1 Ar 34 Using the Cl-atom ARAS technique, an accurate rate coef®cient value for the above reaction was determined. In a second series of experiments they measured the Si formation directly and proposed a simpli®ed thermal decomposition mechanism for SiCl4, highly diluted in argon. The results reported are of importance in the understanding and modeling of ceramic material production via gas phase synthesis. Hydrogen is known to exhibit high reactivity towards silane and its derivatives and therefore reactions involving H atoms are of interest in silane chemistry. Hydrogen abstraction from SiH4 via SiH4 1 H $ SiH3 1 H2 35 was studied by Kunz et al. [194] using H-atom ARAS technique. Ethyliodide C2H5I was used as the source for H atoms and the experiments covering the temperature range 998± 1273 K were performed behind the re¯ected shock. In addition to reporting a rate coef®cient for the abstraction reaction, they have also proposed a reaction mechanism for C2H5I/SiH4 system highly diluted in argon. Simultaneous measurement of H an Si atom concentrations were performed to validate the proposed reaction mechanism. Kinetic data pertaining to chlorinated silanes is not readily available. Kunz et al. [195] studied reactions of H atoms with the Si precursors SiHCl3 and SiCl4 behind re¯ected shock waves in the temperature range 1000± 1730 K. The ARAS technique was used for monitoring H and Si atom concentrations. Based on their experimental results they have deduced rate coef®cients for the reactions H 1 SiHCl3 $ products 36 H 1 SiCl4 $ SiCl3 1 HCl 37 The kinetic data reported is of great relevance as SiHCl3 is a widely used precursor gas in the deposition of silicon ®lms. Tin dioxide SnO2 is an industrially important material as it has a high electric conductivity and also transmissivity. It is used extensively in photovoltaic cells an imaging devices. Its use as an energy conserving coating on windows is widely known. SnO2 is often produced in high temperature gas phase processes as in CVD or ¯ow reactors. However, optimum reaction conditions to control the gas phase processes are still not known, due to lack ot relevant kinetic data. Takahashi et al. [196] have investigated thermal decomposition of Tin Tetrachloride which is an important precursor in the gas phase synthesis of SnO2. ARAS technique was used for monitoring Cl and Sn atoms behind re¯ected shock waves in the temperature range 1250± 1700 K (for Cl) and 2250±28,950 K (for Sn). K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 6.2. Synthesis of Si-nanoparticles Homogeneous nucleation of silicon particles is an important phenomenon in several processes. Gas phase silicon particle formation is the principal goal in the production of sinterable ceramic powders. Control of particle size distribution and particle shape are among primary objectives in the production of silicon powders [197,198]. Frenklach et al. [10] carried out shock tube investigation of silicon particle nucleation and growth in gas phase pyrolysis of silane and proposed a reaction mechanism for the temperature range 900±2000 K. They used silane and di-silane diluted in argon and hydrogen as test gas at pressures from 0.2 to 0.7 atm. Formation of silicon particles was monitored by the attenuation of laser beams of two different wave lengths (light extinction technique), thereby determining particle number density and fractional yield.They observed that the conversion of silane and disilane into silicon particles exhibited a pronounced maximum at about 1150 K and it was affected by reaction pressure, initial reactant concentration, and addition of hydrogen. Selected silicon particle samples were examined by electron microscopy and secondary ion mass spectrometry. Their results indicated that the produced particles were spherical, ranging from 10 to 40 nm in diameter, loosely agglomerated, and contained about 15% hydrogen on an atomic basis. Based on their experimental results, they have proposed a detailed kinetic model which describes gas phase pyrolysis of the parent molecule and homogeneous nucleation of silicon partiales. Bauer and co-workers [199,200] used the shock tube to determine the critical silane pressure for the onset of silicon condensation in 0.05±1.0% SiH4 in Ar mixtures. The particle condensation was detected by monitoring the turbidity and the intensity of the light scattered at 908. The observations were made both behind incident and re¯ected shock waves covering reaction temperatures from 1500 to 2800 K. It was assumed that at these high temperatures, silane decomposes to silicon atoms instantaneously upon shock arrival and the produced silicon atoms undergo condensation. The authors concluded that the observed temperature dependence of the critical silane pressure did not follow the prediction of the classical homogeneous nucleation theory. Another shock tube investigation on the production of silicon particles was carried out by Steinwandel and coworkers [201]. They conducted experiments behind re¯ected shock waves above 2500 K and low initial silane concentrations Several molecular and atomic species (SiH2, SiH, Si2, H2, Si and H) were identi®ed by monitoring the emission spectrum and it was found that the concentration ratio of Si2 to Si cannot be explained by the classical theory of homogeneous nucleation if the condensation is assumed to begin with Si atoms. Instead they proposed a simple kinetic model with Si2 as the monomer species. Non-oxide ceramic compounds, especially nitrides and carbides, are of great technical interest because they are 183 extremely hard, partly chemically inert, refractory and resistant to high temperatures [202]. The gas phase synthesis of non-oxide ceramics is a currently developing area compared to the synthesis of oxide ceramics. Synthesis by aerosol gas phase route allows production of nano-sized particles which have several desirable properties like superplasticity, lower reaction sintering temperatures, higher theoretical densities, higher fracture toughness and ductility than materials sintered from larger particles.Most of these properties are dependent on the availability of small, uniform diameter, spherical particles of high purity. A deep understanding of the gas phase kinetics and the particle growth mechanisms are necessary to choose the appropriate condition. 6.3. Gas phase synthesis of tin nanoparticles Herzler et al. [4] have investigated the formation of both TiN molecules and particles in TiCl4 /NH3/H2 systems behind re¯ected shock waves at temperatures between 1400 and 2500 K and pressures 1±2.3 bar by applying laser absorption spectroscopy. The above mixture was chosen by the investigators because the same type of mixture is used in industrial aerosol reactors to produce TiN nano-particles. A brief description of the experimental procedure and the diagnostic technique employed is given below. The shock tube set up and the optical arrangement used is the same as shown in the upper part of Fig. 23. Details of the vacuum system and gas mixture preparation can be obtained from Roth et al. [4]. As TiCl4 and NH3 are known to form TiCl4(NH3)x complexes at low pressures, they were not mixed before ®lling into the shock tube. TiCl4/H2 and NH3/H2 were ®lled simultaneously and the resulting TiCl4(NH3)x complex heated by the incident shock produces TiCl4 and NH3 instantaneously. The laser spectrometer consisting of a cw ring dye laser pumped by an Ar 1 laser was used to measure the relative TiN molecule as well as TiN particle concentrations. The laser beam was coupled into the measurement plane of the shock tube via an optical ®ber and was split into probe and preference beams prior to entering the shock tube. Two Si photodetectors were used in differential technique to monitor the absorption. The relative TiN molecular absorption was determined by ring dye laser light extinction at the two TiN absorption wavelengths l 614:036 and 620.125 nm as well as at another wavelength about 1.3 cm 21 away from them. To corroborate the TiN particle formation, light extinction measurements were also performed with a He Ne laser (632.8 nm) and with a coherent Ar 1 laser at 514.5 nm. The experiments on formation of molecular TiN were performed in the temperature range 1700±2500 K on a mixture containing 200 ppm TiCl4 and 200 ppm NH3 and 10% H2 in Ar. In a small temperature region of 1800±2000 K, the absorption at l 614:036 nm is 184 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 28. TiN absorption pro®les in 200 ppm TiCl4/200 ppm NH3/10%H2/Ar mixtures. Full line: 1945 K, 2.09 bar, l 614:036 nm (line center), dashed line: 1930 K, 2.06 bar, l 620:125 nm (line center), dotted line: 1975 K, 2.16 bar, l 613:987 nm (off line). dominated by TiN molecule absorption which can be seen in Fig. 28, where the absorption signal is compared with that at l 613:987 nm; where no TiN absorption exists. The pro®les show an induction time, a fast increase to a maximum and then a consumption due to nucleation and particle formation. The formation of TiN molecules could be con®rmed by additional measurements on the absorption line at l 620:125 nm: At temperatures .2000 K, no difference between on-line and off-line absorption could be observed (Fig. 29), which con®rms TiN particle formation. The slightly faster increase of the signal is at l 614:036 nm only due to the higher temperature of this experiment. At temperature less than 1800 K, no absorption above the detection limit of about 0.5% could be seen. Fig. 29. TiN particle extinction in a mixture of 400 ppm TiCl4/2000 ppm, NH3/10%/H2/Ar. Full line: 1570 K, 2.04 bar, l 515:4 nm (off line), dotted line: 1595 K, 2.11 bar, l 614:036 nm (16285.70 cm 21 line center), dashed line: 1617 K, 2.14 bar, l 632:8 nm (off line). K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 At higher concentrations of TiCl4 and NH3 (100±400 ppm TiCl4, 400±2000 ppm NH3 and 0±20% H2), no distinguishable difference between the on-line and off-line TiN absorption signals was noticed. This was because, under these condition, the TiN molecules start nucleating and particles start forming. This was con®rmed by measurements at 632.8 nm (He Ne laser) and 515.4 nm (Ar 1 laser). At all wave lengths used, no difference between on-line and offline signals was observed. The signals always show an induction time, which depends on the reaction condition (especially the reaction temperature) and which is independent of the wave length. The He Ne laser extinction was used to study the in¯uence of temperature, pressure, TiCl4, NH3 and H2 concentrations on the induction time of particle formation. The temperature dependance of the induction time of a mixture of 400 ppm TiCl4, 400 or 2000 ppm NH3 and 10% H2 is shown in Fig. 30. The Arrhenius expression K ms t 1020:98^0:3 £ exp 11; 840 ^ 1130 T 38 describes the various experimental points. The activation energy is in very good agreement with the vale of about 100 kJ/mol, which was reported by Dekker et al. [203]. A dependance of the induction time on the H2 concentration in the range 1.4±20% was not to be found. This is in accordance with the measurements of Buiting et al. 185 [204] and Pintchovski et al. [205] on CVD ®lm growth. They found no in¯uence of the H2 concentration on the ®lm growth and concluded that no H2 is needed to produce TiN ®lms in CVD reactors [206]. 6.4. Production and sizing of soot nano-particles In view of the great industrial demand for carbon black, a new interest has been generated for ®nding optimized methods of producing this material. Extremely ®ne soot particles of nano- meter size are of particular interest in paint industries. As mentioned earlier, high temperature pyrolysis of hydrocarbons is an expensive way of producing nano-sized soot particles. A shock tube can be conveniently used to carry out investigations to optimize the controlling parameters such as mixture composition, temperature and pressure so that the soot particle size and yield can be regulated. Roth et al. [13] have started a series of shock tube investigations into the formation and growth of soot nano-particles from the pyrolysis of acetylene, benzene and propane. Laser light extinction together with LII are the diagnostic techniques used for measuring total soot concentration and particle sizing, respectively. A combination of these two in-situ measuring techniques provides reliable and accurate data on soot nano-particle formation. Typical results obtained by them on a mixture of 5% C2H2 in Ar at 2059 K and 2.9 bar pressure is shown in Fig. 31. The Fig. 30. Induction time of TiN particle formation in a mixture of 400 ppm, TiCl4/400 or 2000 ppm NH3/10%H2/Ar, Full circle: 2000 ppm NH3, l 614:036 nm (on line), open circle: 2000 ppm NH3, l 613:987 nm (off line), full square: 400 ppm NH3, l 614:036 nm (on line), open square: 400 ppm NH3, l 613:987 nm (off line), triangle: 2000 ppm NH3, l 632:80 nm (off line), star: 2000 ppm NH3, l 515:40 nm (off line). 186 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 Fig. 31. cw-Laser extinction (upper part) and typical LII (lower part) abtained with 5%C2 H2 in Ar at T 2059 K; p 2:90 bar: extinction caused by the formation of soot particles occurs with an induction time of about 240 ms and increases during the entire observation time. The trigger of the Nd/YAG laser causes a short overshoot of the signal, which is a convenient control of the delay for the LII measurement. The LII signal(lower part) shows a small background level of about 0.1 a.u. and a peak value of 0.85 a.u. within 15 ns and then a slower decrease back to the back- ground level within the next 250 ns. As a measure for the signal decay, the 50% decay time t 50% is also indicated in the diagram. Fig. 32 shows the decay of LII signal and the corresponding calculated thermal radiation (explained earlier under LII diagnostic technique). A least square ®t for a log normal geometric standard deviation of 1.1 yields a particle mean radius of 8.1 nm. The sensitivity of the method is also K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 187 Fig. 32. Fitting of a normalized LII decay signal, full line: best ®t for a particle mean diameter of a 8:1 nm; dashed line: variation by 1100% at 250% of the best ®t. demonstrated by the two dashed curves calculated with assumed particle radii of 4 nm and 16.2 nm (250 and 1100%) which are clearly outside the uncertainty of measurements. The transformation of LII signals into mean particle radii is shown in Fig. 33 where the particle radius is plotted against the reaction time. The smallest size of about 1.8 nm was found at an early reaction time of about 200 ms. in the 2020 K temperature range. At later reaction times sizes up to 10 nm were found. The general behavior of increasing particle size with increasing reaction time is expected due to agglomeration effects. The appearance of bigger particles at higher temperatures is also reasonable due to the bellshaped soot yield curve reported by Frenklach et al. [172] Fig. 33. Soot particle mean radius at different reaction times during the pyrolysis of C2H2. 188 K.A. Bhaskaran, P. Roth / Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 28 (2002) 151±192 for acetylene. The ®gure also shows how the induction times reduce (dashed lines) with increase in temperature. 7. Conclusion The versatility of the shock tube as a high temperature wave reactor for kinetic studies in both homogeneous and heterogeneous systems, as also for material synthesis has been illustrated with several examples. The use of highly sensitive laser based diagnostic techniques that enable study of rate processes in very dilute systems (reactant concentration in the order of 1 ppm) has been explained. Recent advances made in the ®eld of gas phase particle synthesis using the shock tube as a wave reactor have been brought out. The importance of pre-particle kinetic studies, it is hoped, will continue to keep the shock tube as the most important research tool in the area of high temperature kinetics for many years to come. Acknowledgements The authors gratefully acknowledge the ®nancial support provided by the German Science Foundation. References [1] Wagner HGg. Chemical reaction of shock waves. Proceedings of the Eighth International Shock Tube Symposium. 1971. p. 4/1±29. [2] Vieille P. Sur les discontinuiteÂs produites par la deÂtente brusqe de gaz comprimeÂs. Compte Rendus 1899;129: 1228. [3] Roth P. Shock tube kinetics in homogeneous and heterogeneous reaction systems. Paul Vielle Memorial Lecture delivered at the 20th International Symposium on Shock Waves, 1995. p. 1. [4] Herzler J, Leiberich R, Mick HJ, Roth P. Shock tube study of the formation of TiN molecules and particles. 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