Self-inhibition and mechanism of isobutane pyrolysis
Abstract
The initial stages of the pyrolysis of isobutane have been studied at temperatures between 420 and 570°C. Initial reactant pressures were restricted to the range 300–550 mm Hg in which wall termination of reaction chains is negligible. Particular attention was paid to the self-inhibition of the reaction and to hitherto unreported changes in the distribution of the major products, both of which occur at an unusually early stage in this system. A qualitative account of both phenomena results from the introduction of the reactions, H˙+(CH3)2C : CH2→(CH3)3Ċ(–5), and (CH3)3Ċ+ C4H10→(CH3)2CHĊH2+ C4H10, (7), into the normal Rice-Herzfeld scheme for the propagation of reaction chains. The kinetics of the formation of the major products are compatible with the choice of the mutual reactions of (CH3)3Ċ as the sole homogeneous termination processes.