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Featured researches published by Benoit Husson.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Study of the Low Temperature Oxidation of Propane

Maximilien Cord; Benoit Husson; Juan Carlos Lizardo Huerta; Olivier Herbinet; Pierre-Alexandre Glaude; René Fournet; Baptiste Sirjean; Frédérique Battin-Leclerc; Manuel F. Ruiz-López; Zhandong Wang; Mingfeng Xie; Zhanjun Cheng; Fei Qi

The low-temperature oxidation of propane was investigated using a jet-stirred reactor at atmospheric pressure and two methods of analysis: gas chromatography and synchrotron vacuum ultraviolet photoionization mass spectrometry (SVUV-PIMS) with direct sampling through a molecular jet. The second method allowed the identification of products, such as molecules with hydroperoxy functions, which are not stable enough to be detected by gas chromatography. Mole fractions of the reactants and reaction products were measured as a function of the temperature (530-730 K), with a particular attention to reaction products involved in the low temperature oxidation, such as cyclic ethers, aldehydes, alcohols, ketones, and hydroperoxides. A new model has been obtained from an automatically generated one, which was used as a starting point, with a large number of re-estimated thermochemical and kinetic data. The kinetic data of the most sensitive reactions, i.e., isomerizations of alkylperoxy radicals and the subsequent decompositions, have been calculated at the CBS-QB3 level of theory. The model allows a satisfactory prediction of the experimental data. A flow rate analysis has allowed highlighting the important reaction channels.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Products from the oxidation of linear isomers of hexene.

Frédérique Battin-Leclerc; Anne Rodriguez; Benoit Husson; Olivier Herbinet; Pierre Alexandre Glaude; Zhandong Wang; Zhanjun Cheng; Fei Qi

The experimental study of the oxidation of the three linear isomers of hexene was performed in a quartz isothermal jet-stirred reactor (JSR) at temperatures ranging from 500 to 1100 K including the negative temperature coefficient (NTC) zone, at quasi-atmospheric pressure (1.07 bar), at a residence time of 2 s and with dilute stoichiometric mixtures. The fuel and reaction product mole fractions were measured using online gas chromatography. In the case of 1-hexene, the JSR has also been coupled through a molecular-beam sampling system to a reflectron time-of-flight mass spectrometer combined with tunable synchrotron vacuum ultraviolet photoionization. A difference of reactivity between the three fuels, which varies with the temperature range has been observed and is discussed according to the changes in the possible reaction pathways when the double bond is displaced. An enhanced importance of the reactions via the Waddington mechanism and of those of allylic radicals with HO2 radicals can be noted for 2- and 3-hexenes compared to 1-hexene.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Detailed product analysis during low- and intermediate-temperature oxidation of ethylcyclohexane.

Benoit Husson; Olivier Herbinet; Pierre-Alexandre Glaude; S. S. Ahmed; Frédérique Battin-Leclerc

An experimental study of the oxidation of ethylcyclohexane has been performed in a jet-stirred reactor with online gas chromatography, under quasi-atmospheric pressure (800 Torr), at temperatures ranging from 500 to 1100 K (low- and intermediate-temperature zone including the negative temperature coefficient area), at a residence time of 2 s, and for three equivalence ratios (0.25, 1, and 2). Ethylcyclohexane displays important low-temperature reactivity with a well-marked negative temperature coefficient behavior. In addition to 47 products with a mass lower than ethylcyclohexane which have been quantified, many species with a C(8)H(14)O formula (molecular weight of 126) were detected by GC-MS and 7 of them were quantified. These molecules are cyclic ethers, ketones, and aldehydes with the same carbon skeleton as the reactant. Experiments were also carried on under the same conditions for two other C(8) hydrocarbons, n-octane and 1-octene, showing that the reactivity of ethylcyclohexane is close to that of the alkene and lower than that of the alkane. Simulations using a detailed kinetic model of the literature allow a good prediction of the global reactivity and of the main hydrocarbon products for temperatures above 800 K. The main reaction channels leading to the observed reaction products at both low (below 800 K) and intermediate temperature (above 800 K) are discussed.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Experimental Investigation of the Low Temperature Oxidation of the Five Isomers of Hexane

Zhandong Wang; Olivier Herbinet; Zhanjun Cheng; Benoit Husson; René Fournet; Fei Qi; Frédérique Battin-Leclerc

The low-temperature oxidation of the five hexane isomers (n-hexane, 2-methyl-pentane, 3-methyl-pentane, 2,2-dimethylbutane, and 2,3-dimethylbutane) was studied in a jet-stirred reactor (JSR) at atmospheric pressure under stoichiometric conditions between 550 and 1000 K. The evolution of reactant and product mole fraction profiles were recorded as a function of the temperature using two analytical methods: gas chromatography and synchrotron vacuum ultraviolet photoionization mass spectrometry (SVUV-PIMS). Experimental data obtained with both methods were in good agreement for the five fuels. These data were used to compare the reactivity and the nature of the reaction products and their distribution. At low temperature (below 800 K), n-hexane was the most reactive isomer. The two methyl-pentane isomers have about the same reactivity, which was lower than that of n-hexane. 2,2-Dimethylbutane was less reactive than the two methyl-pentane isomers, and 2,3-dimethylbutane was the least reactive isomer. These observations are in good agreement with research octane numbers given in the literature. Cyclic ethers with rings including 3, 4, 5, and 6 atoms have been identified and quantified for the five fuels. While the cyclic ether distribution was notably more detailed than in other literature of JSR studies of branched alkane oxidation, some oxiranes were missing among the cyclic ethers expected from methyl-pentanes. Using SVUV-PIMS, the formation of C2-C3 monocarboxylic acids, ketohydroperoxides, and species with two carbonyl groups have also been observed, supporting their possible formation from branched reactants. This is in line with what was previously experimentally demonstrated from linear fuels. Possible structures and ways of decomposition of the most probable ketohydroperoxides were discussed. Above 800 K, all five isomers have about the same reactivity, with a larger formation from branched alkanes of some unsaturated species, such as allene and propyne, which are known to be soot precursors.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016

Study of the Formation of the First Aromatic Rings in the Pyrolysis of Cyclopentene

Olivier Herbinet; Anne Rodriguez; Benoit Husson; Frédérique Battin-Leclerc; Zhandong Wang; Zhanjun Cheng; Fei Qi

The thermal decomposition of cyclopentene was studied in a jet-stirred reactor operated at constant pressure and temperature to provide new experimental information about the formation of the first aromatic rings from cyclic C5 species. Experiments were carried out at a residence time of 1 s, a pressure of 106.7 kPa, temperatures ranging from 773 to 1073 K and under diluted conditions (cyclopentene inlet mole fraction of 0.04). Species were quantified using three analytical methods: gas chromatography, synchrotron vacuum ultraviolet photoionization mass spectrometry (SVUV-PIMS), and single photon laser ionization mass spectrometry (SPI-MS). Several species could be quantified using both methods allowing comparison of experimental data obtained with the three apparatuses. Discrepancies observed in mole fraction profiles of some large aromatics suggest that the direct sampling in the gas phase (with a molecular beam or a capillary tube) provide more reliable results. The main reaction products are 1,3-cyclopentadiene and hydrogen. The formation of many unsaturated C2-C6 olefins, diolefins and alkynes was also observed but in smaller amounts. Benzene, toluene, styrene, indene, and naphthalene were detected from 923 K. SVUV-PIMS data allowed the identification of another C6H6 isomer which is 1,5-hexadien-3-yne rather than fulvene. The quantification of the cyclopentadienyl radical was obtained from SVUV-PIMS and SPI-MS data with some uncertainty induced by the possible contribution to the signal for m/z 65 of a fragment from the decomposition of a larger ion. This is the first time that a radical is quantified in a jet-stirred reactor using non-optical techniques. SPI-MS analyses allowed the detection of species likely being combination products of allyl and cyclopentadienyl radicals. A model was developed for the pyrolysis of cyclopentene. This model includes routes of formation of aromatics from the cyclopentadienyl radical. The comparison of experimental and computed data is overall satisfactory for primary reaction products whereas discrepancies are still observed for aromatics.


Combustion and Flame | 2012

Experimental and modeling investigation of the low-temperature oxidation of n-heptane

Olivier Herbinet; Benoit Husson; Zeynep Serinyel; Maximilien Cord; Valérie Warth; René Fournet; Pierre-Alexandre Glaude; Baptiste Sirjean; Frédérique Battin-Leclerc; Zhandong Wang; Mingfeng Xie; Zhanjun Cheng; Fei Qi


Combustion and Flame | 2012

Experimental and modeling study of the oxidation of n-butylbenzene

Benoit Husson; Roda Bounaceur; Kotaro Tanaka; Maude Ferrari; Olivier Herbinet; Pierre Alexandre Glaude; René Fournet; Frédérique Battin-Leclerc; Moïse Crochet; Guillaume Vanhove; R. Minetti; Colin J. Tobin; Kenji Yasunaga; John M. Simmie; Henry J. Curran; Tidjani Niass; Olivier Mathieu; Sayed S. Ahmed


Proceedings of the Combustion Institute. International Symposium on Combustion | 2013

Low temperature oxidation of benzene and toluene in mixture with n-decane

Olivier Herbinet; Benoit Husson; Maude Ferrari; Pierre-Alexandre Glaude; Frédérique Battin-Leclerc


Proceedings of the Combustion Institute | 2013

New experimental evidence and modeling study of the ethylbenzene oxidation

Benoit Husson; Maude Ferrari; Olivier Herbinet; Syed Sayeed Ahmed; Pierre-Alexandre Glaude; Frédérique Battin-Leclerc


Proceedings of the Combustion Institute | 2015

The oxidation of large alkylbenzenes: An experimental and modeling study

Frédérique Battin-Leclerc; Valérie Warth; Roda Bounaceur; Benoit Husson; Olivier Herbinet; Pierre-Alexandre Glaude

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Zhandong Wang

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Fei Qi

University of Science and Technology of China

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Zhanjun Cheng

University of Science and Technology of China

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