Oxidation and nitridation of vitreous carbon at high temperatures

Citation

Vanessa J. Murray, Pedro Recio, Adriana Caracciolo, Chloe Miossec, Nadia Balucani, Piergiorgio Casavecchia, Timothy K. Minton, Oxidation and nitridation of vitreous carbon at high temperatures, Carbon, Volume 167, Pages 388-402 (2020) https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carbon.2020.05.076.

Abstract

Molecular beam-surface scattering experiments were used to obtain fundamental data on gas-surface interactions that are central to the ablation of carbon during hypersonic flight through air. Continuous beams containing O or N atoms with incident velocities of ∼2000 m s−1 were directed at a vitreous carbon surface at temperatures in the range, 800–1873 K, and the products that desorbed from the surface were detected with a rotatable mass spectrometer detector as a function of their velocity and scattering angle. All products exhibited the dynamical characteristics of thermal desorption. The efficiencies of the gas-surface interactions, both reactive and non-reactive, were quantified as a function of surface temperature. In addition to reacting with carbon to produce CO2 (minor product) and CO (major product), oxygen atoms may recombine on the surface to produce O2 with an efficiency that is somewhat lower than that to produce CO. Nitrogen atoms may recombine on the surface to produce N2 or react to produce CN. The recombination efficiency of N atoms is generally more than an order of magnitude higher than the reaction efficiency to produce CN. The quantitative reaction efficiencies reported here are useful for the development of air-carbon models for hypersonic ablation.

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Received 20 April 2020, Revised 23 May 2020, Accepted 25 May 2020, Available online 27 May 2020, Version of Record 23 June 2020. This work was supported by the U.S. Air Force office of Scientific Research: FA 9550-17-0057. P. R., A. C., C. M., N. B, and P. C. acknowledge financial support by the ‘‘Università degli Studi di Perugia” (‘‘Fondo Ricerca di Base 2017”), and Italian MIUR and Università degli Studi di Perugia within the program “Department of Excellence − 2018–2022 – project AMIS”. The authors are grateful to Profs. Tom Schwartzentruber and Scott Anderson for many helpful discussions.

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