Thermochemical Data and Additivity Group Values for Ten Species of o-Xylene Low-Temperature Oxidation Mechanism
- 28 December 2011
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in The Journal of Physical Chemistry A
- Vol. 116 (1) , 592-610
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jp208382t
Abstract
o-Xylene could be a good candidate to represent the family of aromatic hydrocarbons in a surrogate fuel. This study uses computational chemistry to calculate standard enthalpies of formation at 298 K, ΔfH°(298 K), standard entropies at 298 K, S°(298 K), and standard heat capacities Cp°(T) over the temperature range 300 K to 1500 K for ten target species present in the low-temperature oxidation mechanism of o-xylene: o-xylene (1), 2-methylbenzyl radical (2), 2-methylbenzylperoxy radical (3), 2-methylbenzyl hydroperoxide (4), 2-(hydroperoxymethyl)benzyl radical (5), 2-(hydroperoxymethyl)benzaldehyde (6), 1-ethyl-2-methylbenzene (7), 2,3-dimethylphenol (8), 2-hydroxybenzaldehyde (9), and 3-hydroxybenzaldehyde (10). ΔfH°(298 K) values are weighted averages across the values calculated using five isodesmic reactions and five composite calculation methods: CBS-QB3, G3B3, G3MP2, G3, and G4. The uncertainty in ΔfH°(298 K) is also evaluated. S°(298 K) and Cp°(T) values are calculated at B3LYP/6-311G(d,p) level of theory from molecular properties and statistical thermodynamics through evaluation of translational, rotational, vibrational, and electronic partition functions. S°(298 K) and Cp°(300 K) values are evaluated using the rigid-rotor-harmonic-oscillator model. Cp°(T) values at T ≥ 400 K are calculated by treating separately internal rotation contributions and translational, external rotational, vibrational, and electronic contributions. The thermochemical properties of six target species are used to develop six new additivity groups taking into account the interaction between two substituents in ortho (ORT/CH2OOH/ME, ORT/ET/ME, ORT/CHO/OH, ORT/CHO/CH2OOH) or meta (MET/CHO/OH) positions, and the interaction between three substituents (ME/ME/OH123) located one beside the other (positions numbered 1, 2, 3) for two- or three-substituted benzenic species. Two other additivity groups are also developed using the thermochemical properties of benzenic species taken from the literature: the C/CB/H2/OO and the CB/CO groups. These groups extend the capacities of the group additivity method to deal with substituted benzenic species.This publication has 70 references indexed in Scilit:
- Additivity methods for prediction of thermochemical properties. The Laidler method revisited. 2. Hydrocarbons including substituted cyclic compoundsThe Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics, 2009
- Accurate thermochemistry from quantum chemical calculations?Monatshefte für Chemie / Chemical Monthly, 2008
- Thermochemical studies on salicylaldehyde and salicylamideThe Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics, 2007
- Thermodynamic and Ab Initio Analysis of the Controversial Enthalpy of Formation of FormaldehydeChemphyschem, 2006
- Thermodynamic Equilibria in Xylene Isomerization. 5. Xylene Isomerization Equilibria from Thermodynamic Studies and Reconciliation of Calculated and Experimental Product DistributionsJournal of Chemical & Engineering Data, 1997
- Group additivity thermodynamic parameters (terms) for Br, Cl, F, CH3 and OH interactions and CH3 buttress effects in multi-substituted aromaticsThermochimica Acta, 1993
- Photoelectron spectroscopy of the o-, m-, and p-methylbenzyl radicals. Implications for the thermochemistry of the radicals and ionsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1986
- The methylbenzenes II. Fundamental vibrational shifts, statistical thermodynamic functions, and properties of formationThe Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics, 1985
- Thermodynamic properties of organic oxygen compounds 42. Physical and thermodynamic properties of benzaldehydeThe Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics, 1975
- The Thermodynamics and Molecular Structure of Benzene and Its Methyl Derivatives1Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1943