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Original Articles

UNDERSTANDING REACTIVE HAZARDS USING MOLECULAR SIMULATION: MECHANISMS OF HYDROXYLAMINE DECOMPOSITION

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Pages 579-585 | Published online: 30 Jan 2007
 

Abstract

Reactive hazards have been a significant concern for the chemical process industries. Without sufficient control of chemical hazards and risks, reactive incidents have caused catastrophic consequences for humans and the environment worldwide. In order to help understand and evaluate reactive hazards, calorimetric investigations have been employed to characterize reactive chemical behavior. However, with the development of computer resources and computational chemistry, molecular simulation has become a powerful and reliable tool to complement and guide experimental testing. In this article, hydroxylamine (HA) calculations demonstrate the application of molecular simulation for understanding and controlling reactive hazards. Using the quantum mechanical software Gaussian 03, HA bimolecular or water-catalyzed HA isomerization to ammonia oxide in aqueous solution was identified as the most likely decomposition pathways. Based on these molecular simulation results, recommendations are provided for safer handling of HA.

Acknowledgment

This research was supported by the Mary Kay O'Connor Process Safety Center. We thank the Laboratory for Molecular Simulation at Texas A&M University for software and support. We also thank the supercomputing facility at Texas A&M University for computer time.

Notes

a B3LYP zero-point energy (ZPE) including thermal corrections.

b MPW1K zero-point energy (ZPE) including thermal corrections.

Species in parentheses are reactant wells or product wells including the hydrogen bond effect.

G at 298 K (G298) = [electronic and thermal corrections to free energies of products] − [electronic and thermal corrections to free energies of reactants]

a BDE in aqueous solution was calculated using the COSMO model, with gas-phase thermal corrections included.

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