Samah Y. Mohamed
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
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Featured researches published by Samah Y. Mohamed.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016
Samah Y. Mohamed; Liming Cai; Fethi Khaled; Colin Banyon; Zhandong Wang; Mariam J. Al Rashidi; Heinz Pitsch; Henry J. Curran; Aamir Farooq; S. Mani Sarathy
Accurate chemical kinetic combustion models of lightly branched alkanes (e.g., 2-methylalkanes) are important to investigate the combustion behavior of real fuels. Improving the fidelity of existing kinetic models is a necessity, as new experiments and advanced theories show inaccuracies in certain portions of the models. This study focuses on updating thermodynamic data and the kinetic reaction mechanism for a gasoline surrogate component, 2-methylhexane, based on recently published thermodynamic group values and rate rules derived from quantum calculations and experiments. Alternative pathways for the isomerization of peroxy-alkylhydroperoxide (OOQOOH) radicals are also investigated. The effects of these updates are compared against new high-pressure shock tube and rapid compression machine ignition delay measurements. It is shown that rate constant modifications are required to improve agreement between kinetic modeling simulations and experimental data. We further demonstrate the ability to optimize the kinetic model using both manual and automated techniques for rate parameter tunings to improve agreement with the measured ignition delay time data. Finally, additional low temperature chain branching reaction pathways are shown to improve the models performance. The present approach to model development provides better performance across extended operating conditions while also strengthening the fundamental basis of the model.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Zhandong Wang; Denisia M. Popolan-Vaida; Bingjie Chen; Kai Moshammer; Samah Y. Mohamed; Heng Wang; Salim Sioud; Misjudeen Raji; Katharina Kohse-Höinghaus; Nils Hansen; Philippe Dagaut; Stephen R. Leone; S. Mani Sarathy
Significance Highly oxygenated molecules are involved in autooxidation reactions leading to the formation of secondary organic aerosols (SOAs); they are also critical intermediates in autooxidation processes for liquid hydrogen degradation and the ignition of fuels in advanced combustion systems. However, these reactions are still poorly understood. In this study, we unveil a generalized reaction mechanism involving the autooxidation of peroxy radicals with at least three stages of sequential O2 addition. We elucidate important underlying kinetics and structural characteristics of autooxidation processes used for developing new technologies including those aimed at reducing climatically active SOAs and pollutants from fuel combustion. We show that advances can be made by bridging experimental and theoretical methods used by atmospheric and combustion scientists. Decades of research on the autooxidation of organic compounds have provided fundamental and practical insights into these processes; however, the structure of many key autooxidation intermediates and the reactions leading to their formation still remain unclear. This work provides additional experimental evidence that highly oxygenated intermediates with one or more hydroperoxy groups are prevalent in the autooxidation of various oxygenated (e.g., alcohol, aldehyde, keto compounds, ether, and ester) and nonoxygenated (e.g., normal alkane, branched alkane, and cycloalkane) organic compounds. These findings improve our understanding of autooxidation reaction mechanisms that are routinely used to predict fuel ignition and oxidative stability of liquid hydrocarbons, while also providing insights relevant to the formation mechanisms of tropospheric aerosol building blocks. The direct observation of highly oxygenated intermediates for the autooxidation of alkanes at 500–600 K builds upon prior observations made in atmospheric conditions for the autooxidation of terpenes and other unsaturated hydrocarbons; it shows that highly oxygenated intermediates are stable at conditions above room temperature. These results further reveal that highly oxygenated intermediates are not only accessible by chemical activation but also by thermal activation. Theoretical calculations on H-atom migration reactions are presented to rationalize the relationship between the organic compound’s molecular structure (n-alkane, branched alkane, and cycloalkane) and its propensity to produce highly oxygenated intermediates via extensive autooxidation of hydroperoxyalkylperoxy radicals. Finally, detailed chemical kinetic simulations demonstrate the influence of these additional reaction pathways on the ignition of practical fuels.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2018
Samah Y. Mohamed; Alexander C. Davis; Mariam J. Al Rashidi; S. Mani Sarathy
Hydroperoxyalkylperoxy (OOQOOH) radical isomerization is an important low-temperature chain branching reaction within the mechanism of hydrocarbon oxidation. This isomerization may proceed via the migration of the α-hydrogen to the hydroperoxide group. In this work, a combination of high level composite methods-CBS-QB3, G3, and G4-is used to determine the high-pressure-limit rate parameters for the title reaction. Rate rules for H-migration reactions proceeding through 5-, 6-, 7-, and 8-membered ring transitions states are determined. Migrations from primary, secondary and tertiary carbon sites to the peroxy group are considered. Chirality is also investigated by considering two diastereomers for reactants and transition states with two chiral centers. This is important since chirality may influence the energy barrier of the reaction as well as the rotational energy barriers of hindered rotors in chemical species and transition states. The effect of chirality and hydrogen bonding interactions in the investigated energies and rate constants is studied. The results show that while the energy difference between two diastereomers ranges from 0.1-3.2 kcal/mol, chirality hardly affects the kinetics, except at low temperatures (atmospheric conditions) or when two chiral centers are present in the reactant. Regarding the effect of the H-migration ring size, it is found that in most cases, the 1,5 and 1,6 H-migration reactions have similar rates at low temperatures (below ∼830 K) since the 1,6 H-migration proceeds via a cyclohexane-like transition state similar to that of the 1,5 H-migration.
SAE Technical Paper Series | 2018
Anil Bhaurao Wakale; Samah Y. Mohamed; Nimal Naser; Mohammed Jaasim Mubarak Ali; Raja Banerjee; Hong G. Im; S. Mani Sarathy
This work was funded by competitive research funding from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) under the Clean Combustion Research Center internship program in collaboration with IIT Hyderabad. We would like to express our gratitude to Research Scholar Mr. Eshan Singh, for his support in carrying out Experiments at KAUST.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2018
Samah Y. Mohamed; Alexander Cory Davis; Mariam J. Al Rashidi; S. Mani Sarathy
Hydroperoxyalkylperoxy (OOQOOH) radicals are important intermediates in combustion chemistry. The conventional isomerization of OOQOOH radicals to form ketohydroperoxides has been long believed to be the most important chain branching reaction under the low-temperature combustion conditions. In this work, the kinetics of competing pathways (alternative isomerization, concerted elimination, and H-exchange pathways) to the conventional isomerization of different β-, γ- and Δ-OOQOOH butane isomers are investigated. Six- and seven-membered ring conventional isomerizations are found to be the dominant pathways, whereas alternative isomerizations are more important than conventional isomerization, when the latter proceeded via a more strained transition state ring. The oxygen atoms in OOQOOH radicals introduce intramolecular hydrogen bonding (HB) that significantly affects the energies of reacting species and transition states, ultimately influencing chemical kinetics. Conceptually, HB has a dual effect on the stability of chemical species, the first being the stabilizing effect of the actual intramolecular HB force, and the second being the destabilizing effect of ring strain imposed by the HB conformer. The overall effect can be quantified by determining the difference between the minimum energy conformers of a chemical species or transition state that have HB and that do not have HB (non-hydrogen bonding (NHB)). The stabilization effect of HB on the species and transition sates is assessed, and its effect on the calculated rate constants is also considered. Our results show that, for most species and transition states, HB stabilizes their energies by as much as 2.5 kcal/mol. However, NHB conformers are found to be more stable by up to 2.7 kcal/mol for a few of the considered species. To study the effect of HB on rate constants, reactions are categorized into two groups ( groups one and two) based on the structural similarity of the minimum energy conformers of the reactant and transition state, for a particular reaction. For cases where the reactant and transition state conformers are similar (i.e., both HB or NHB structures), group one, the effect of HB on reaction kinetics is major only if the magnitudes of the stabilization energy of the reactant and transition state are quite different. Meanwhile, for group two, where the reactant and transition state prefer different conformers (one HB and the other NHB), HB affects the kinetics when the stabilization energy of the reactant or transition state is significant or the entropy effect is important. This information is useful in determining corrections accounting for HB effects when assigning rate parameters for chemical reactions using estimation and/or analogy, where analogies usually result in inaccuracies when modeling atmospheric and combustion processes.
Combustion and Flame | 2017
Nour Atef; Goutham Kukkadapu; Samah Y. Mohamed; Mariam J. Al Rashidi; Colin Banyon; Marco Mehl; Karl A. Heufer; Ehson F. Nasir; Adamu Alfazazi; Apurba K. Das; Charles K. Westbrook; William J. Pitz; Tianfeng Lu; Aamir Farooq; Chih-Jen Sung; Henry J. Curran; Mani Sarathy
Combustion and Flame | 2016
Liming Cai; Heinz Pitsch; Samah Y. Mohamed; Venkat Raman; John Bugler; Henry J. Curran; S. Mani Sarathy
Combustion and Flame | 2017
Mariam J. Al Rashidi; Juan C. Mármol; Colin Banyon; Muhammad Bilal Sajid; Marco Mehl; William J. Pitz; Samah Y. Mohamed; Adamu Alfazazi; Tianfeng Lu; Henry J. Curran; Aamir Farooq; S. Mani Sarathy
Proceedings of the Combustion Institute | 2017
Vijai Shankar Bhavani Shankar; Mohammed AlAbbad; Mariam El-Rachidi; Samah Y. Mohamed; Eshan Singh; Zhandong Wang; Aamir Farooq; S. Mani Sarathy
Proceedings of the Combustion Institute | 2017
Hatem Selim; Samah Y. Mohamed; Alaa E Dawood; S. Mani Sarathy