Effect of reaction temperature on nascent carbonaceous particles from toluene shock-tube pyrolysis: Insights from FTIR and Raman spectroscopy
Meysam K. Rezaeian, Can Shao, J\"urgen Herzler, Mustapha Fikri, Greg J. Smallwood, Christof Schulz

TL;DR
This study investigates how reaction temperature influences the formation and structural evolution of nascent carbonaceous particles from toluene pyrolysis, using FTIR and Raman spectroscopy to identify key phase transitions.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectroscopic insights into the temperature-dependent structural changes and radical involvement during soot inception from toluene pyrolysis.
Findings
Particle formation begins at 1570 K, identified by Raman and TEM.
Maximum primary particle size occurs at 1670 K, indicating ordering.
Spectroscopic analysis reveals radical-rich environments and structural evolution with temperature.
Abstract
The transition from gaseous precursors to nascent solid particles and their subsequent structural maturation were investigated in single-pulse shock-tube experiments using ex situ Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) and Raman spectroscopy of sampled products. A mixture of 2% toluene in argon was pyrolyzed at around 2.0 bar with temperature plateau times of 2.0 ms over the 1450-1800 K reaction temperature range. In situ laser extinction measurements indicate the onset of particle formation at 1570 K. At this temperature, Raman spectra exhibit emerging D and G bands, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) reveals the disappearance of poorly defined structures, identifying 1570 K as the phase-transition reaction temperature. Approaching this reaction temperature, Raman spectra show a rapid disappearance of sp hybridized triple carbon bonds. At 1670 K reaction temperature, a maximum in…
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