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Enols Are Common Intermediates in Hydrocarbon Oxidation
328
Citations
24
References
2005
Year
Laminar FlameChemical EngineeringEngineeringBiochemistryPhotoionization Mass SpectrometryCombustion ScienceNatural SciencesCombustion TheoryOrganic ChemistryReaction IntermediateCatalysisChemistryUnexpected CompoundsHydrocarbon OxidationChemical KineticsDeoxygenationEnantioselective SynthesisFire Chemistry
Models for chemical mechanisms of hydrocarbon oxidation rely on spectrometric identification of molecular structures in flames. Carbonyl (keto) compounds are well-established combustion intermediates. However, their less-stable enol tautomers, bearing OH groups adjacent to carbon-carbon double bonds, are not included in standard models. We observed substantial quantities of two-, three-, and four-carbon enols by photoionization mass spectrometry of flames burning representative compounds from modern fuel blends. Concentration profiles demonstrate that enol flame chemistry cannot be accounted for purely by keto-enol tautomerization. Currently accepted hydrocarbon oxidation mechanisms will likely require revision to explain the formation and reactivity of these unexpected compounds.
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