Pressure-Dependent Kinetic Analysis of the N2H3 Potential Energy Surface

16 October 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Pressure-dependent reactions on the N2H3 potential energy surface (PES) are studied at the CCSDT(Q)/aug-cc-pVTZ//B2PLYPD3/aug-cc-pVTZ level of theory. This work extends the N2H3 PES relative to previous literature studies by adding another isomer, NH3N, and additional bimolecular channels adjacent to the new isomer, NNH + H2, and H2NN + H. Theoretical predictions are made for the rate coefficients of all path and well-skipping pressure-dependent reactions. The theoretical analyses employ a combination of ab-initio transition state theory and master equation simulations. Pressure-dependent rate coefficients are computed for all reactions in the network. The dominant products of NH2+NH(T) recombination are N2H2+H, and at high pressures and low temperatures N2H3 formation becomes important. Collisions of H2NN + H on this surface yield mainly N2H2 +H as well. Important secondary reactions are H2NN+ H <=> NNH + H2 at high temperatures and all examined pressures and H2NN + H <=> N2H3 at low temperatures and high pressures. None of these three reactions were considered by previous NH3 oxidation models with pressure-dependent rate coefficients. The rate coefficients obtained here should be useful in modeling ammonia, hydrazine, and hydrazine derivatives in various combustion environments.

Keywords

N2H3
ammonia
hydrazine
kinetics
pressure dependent

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information for the paper: Pressure-Dependent Kinetic Analysis of the N2H3 Potential Energy Surface
Description
A PDF file with: • Stationary points geometries, T1 diagnostic factors, and imaginary frequencies (Table S1) • Torsional scan of N2H3 at a resolution of 10o at the B2PLYP-D3/aug-cc-pVTZ level (Fig. S1) 23 • Representation of the N2H3 PES along with energy values from previous studies (Fig. S2) • NH3N Thermodynamic properties – Chemkin format (Table S2) • NH3N Thermodynamic properties – Cantera format (Table S3) • Computed rate coefficient – Chemkin format (Table S4) • Computed rate coefficient – Cantera format (Table S5)
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