Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6478167 | Proceedings of the Combustion Institute | 2017 | 11 Pages |
The oxidation of soot, obtained from 1-decene and ethylene flames, in a mixture of ionized and molecular O2, was observed in real time by environmental transmission electron microscopy for the first time. The oxidation mode (surface vs. internal), and rate, was measured for individual primary particles, demonstrating that mature primary particles primarily oxidize through surface reactions. Further experiments with less mature soot particles showed oxygen permeation into the core of the primary particles, causing internal oxidation, as well as surface reactions, demonstrating a link between soot ageing and the oxidation mode. Aggregate structural changes and fragmentation throughout oxidation were also characterized; with surface reactions weakening the bridges between primary particles until the aggregate breaks up. In the last stages of aggregate oxidation, the primary particles were seen to lose their graphitic shell and spherical nature, with the remaining disordered carbon reforming into large amorphous masses before burning away. The role of ionized oxygen species on oxidation rates is also discussed, and showed a strong dependence on electron beam voltage.