TY - JOUR
T1 - On explosion limits of hydrogen–oxygen mixtures with a catalytic platinum surface
AU - Li, Jianhang
AU - Liang, Wenkai
AU - Han, Wenhu
AU - Law, Chung K.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/7/1
Y1 - 2025/7/1
N2 - In this study, we computationally investigated the explosion limits of hydrogen–oxygen (H2-O2) mixtures with a catalytic platinum (Pt) surface. As a classical problem in combustion kinetics, the explosion limits of H2-O2 mixtures show the non-monotonic, Z-shaped response. Current results show that the explosion limits over Pt still retain the Z-shaped response, but become more explosive. The transition is explained by the responses of the kinetic parameters describing the gaseous and catalytic reactions competition. For the surface species, hydrogen oxidation is characterized mainly by the desorption of H(S) from the surface to allow the numbers of Pt(S), O(S), OH(S), and H2O(S) sites to increase. Results further show that the site density, residence time, catalytic area, and reactor volume show different effects on the explosion limits. The more intriguing result is that, with increasing equivalence ratio, the H2-O2 explosion limit curve in the pressure–temperature space rotates counterclockwise around a point on the third limit, which is determined by the different reactivities of gaseous and catalytic reactions for low- and high-pressure conditions. In addition, catalytic and wall termination effects on the limits are compared. The result provides useful insights into the surface reaction kinetics of the H2-O2 explosion limits over Pt, which is closely related to the efficient utilization as well as the assessment of safety issues for hydrogen.
AB - In this study, we computationally investigated the explosion limits of hydrogen–oxygen (H2-O2) mixtures with a catalytic platinum (Pt) surface. As a classical problem in combustion kinetics, the explosion limits of H2-O2 mixtures show the non-monotonic, Z-shaped response. Current results show that the explosion limits over Pt still retain the Z-shaped response, but become more explosive. The transition is explained by the responses of the kinetic parameters describing the gaseous and catalytic reactions competition. For the surface species, hydrogen oxidation is characterized mainly by the desorption of H(S) from the surface to allow the numbers of Pt(S), O(S), OH(S), and H2O(S) sites to increase. Results further show that the site density, residence time, catalytic area, and reactor volume show different effects on the explosion limits. The more intriguing result is that, with increasing equivalence ratio, the H2-O2 explosion limit curve in the pressure–temperature space rotates counterclockwise around a point on the third limit, which is determined by the different reactivities of gaseous and catalytic reactions for low- and high-pressure conditions. In addition, catalytic and wall termination effects on the limits are compared. The result provides useful insights into the surface reaction kinetics of the H2-O2 explosion limits over Pt, which is closely related to the efficient utilization as well as the assessment of safety issues for hydrogen.
KW - Explosion limits
KW - Hydrogen
KW - Platinum
KW - Surface kinetics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85217886056&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.fuel.2025.134773
DO - 10.1016/j.fuel.2025.134773
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85217886056
SN - 0016-2361
VL - 391
JO - Fuel
JF - Fuel
M1 - 134773
ER -