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Open AccessArticle10.7907/y16v-vy27

Shock waves in chemical kinetics

Britton, John D.-2003-11-26-CaltechTHESIS (California Institute of Technology)

TL;DRAbstract

NOTE: Text or symbols not renderable in plain ASCII are indicated by [...]. Abstract is included in .pdf document. The rates of dissociation of I[subscript 2] in N[subscript 2] and CO[subscript 2], and Br[subscript 2] in A were measured at temperatures around 1300[degrees]K by heating room temperature mixtures by means of shock waves and observing the subsequent reactions. The rates of recombination of both I[subscript 2] and Br[subscript 2] were found to decrease with increasing temperature. The results, combined with room temperature measurements seemed to be best expressed in the form K[subscript R] = A exp([...]/RT). Attempts to measure the efficiency of I[subscript 2] or Br[subscript 2] molecules as third bodies for the recombination gave only rather wide limits to the possible values. The experiments also showed that CO[subscript 2] is vibrationally relaxed at high temperatures in a time short compared to the reaction time of 20-200 microseconds. It was not possible to decide whe

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NOTE: Text or symbols not renderable in plain ASCII are indicated by [...]. Abstract is included in .pdf document. The rates of dissociation of I[subscript 2] in N[subscript 2] and CO[subscript 2], and Br[subscript 2] in A were measured at temperatures around 1300[degrees]K by heating room temperature mixtures by means of shock waves and observing the subsequent reactions. The rates of recombination of both I[subscript 2] and Br[subscript 2] were found to decrease with increasing temperature. The results, combined with room temperature measurements seemed to be best expressed in the form K[subscript R] = A exp([...]/RT). Attempts to measure the efficiency of I[subscript 2] or Br[subscript 2] molecules as third bodies for the recombination gave only rather wide limits to the possible values. The experiments also showed that CO[subscript 2] is vibrationally relaxed at high temperatures in a time short compared to the reaction time of 20-200 microseconds. It was not possible to decide whe

Keywords

KineticsShock wavePhysicsMechanicsClassical mechanics

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