1. Influence of light, temperature and iron oxidation state on the dissolution rate of combusted iron particles in oxalic acid
- Author
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Lausch, M., Ruan, Y., Brockmann, P., Zimina, A., Etzold, B. J. M., and Hussong, J.
- Subjects
Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
In this study, the influence of temperature $(40-80 ^\circ\mathrm{C})$ and light exposure on the dissolution of combusted iron particles in aqueous oxalic acid $(0.45~\mathrm{mol/L})$ is experimentally investigated. Unlike previous studies, real combusted iron particles with varying fuel-to-air equivalence ratios were used instead of model oxides. In-situ video recordings reveal the evolution of particle size and morphology. Increasing temperature and short-wavelength light exposure enhance the reaction rate, with light-induced effects only becoming significant above $40 ^\circ$C for the duration of the experiments. This behavior differs significantly from hematite/maghemite oxides, attributed to the internal Fe phase structure of the combusted iron particles. At $80^\circ$C with additional light irradiation, a sudden decrease in reaction rate is observed due to solid ferrous oxide formation. While the fuel-to-air ratio induces differences in iron oxide phase composition, it does not affect the dissolution combusted iron particles significantly., Comment: results unchanged 1) Updated Fig.6b: initial upload included old draft with placeholder from previous publication (Lausch et al., J. Chem. Phys. 161, 194308 (2024)). Apologies for the oversight. 2) Reworded summary of mixed-phase particles (due to old draft). 3) Corrected typos
- Published
- 2024