Applied Sciences (Apr 2021)

Origin and Justification of the Use of the Arrhenius Relation to Represent the Reaction Rate of the Thermal Decomposition of a Solid

  • Benjamin Batiot,
  • Thomas Rogaume,
  • Franck Richard,
  • Jocelyn Luche,
  • Anthony Collin,
  • Eric Guillaume,
  • José Luis Torero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app11094075
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. 4075

Abstract

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Degradation models are commonly used to describe the generation of combustible gases when predicting fire behavior. A model may include many sub-models, such as heat and mass transfer models, pyrolysis models or mechanical models. The pyrolysis sub-models require the definition of a decomposition mechanism and the associated reaction rates. Arrhenius-type equations are commonly used to quantify the reaction rates. Arrhenius-type equations allow the representation of chemical decomposition as a function of temperature. This representation of the reaction rate originated from the study of gas-phase reactions, but it has been extrapolated to liquid and solid decomposition. Its extension to solid degradation needs to be justified because using an Arrhenius-type formulation implies important simplifications that are potentially questionable. This study describes these simplifications and their potential consequences when it comes to the quantification of solid-phase reaction rates. Furthermore, a critical analysis of the existing thermal degradation models is presented to evaluate the implications of using an Arrhenius-type equation to quantify mass-loss rates and gaseous fuel production for fire predictions.

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