Ablative thermal protection systems: Pyrolysis modeling by scale- bridging molecular dynamics
A Harpale and S Sawant and R Kumar and D Levin and HB Chew, CARBON, 130, 315-324 (2018).
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2017.12.099
Pyrolysis of a phenolic polymer is a well-known heat removal mechanism in charring ablators, but the process has not been well-quantified. Here, we perform scale-bridging molecular dynamics (MD) simulations based on a reactive-force-field (ReaxFF) potential to elucidate the pyrolysis kinetics of a highly crosslinked phenolic formaldehyde resin. We show that bulk pyrolysis starts at temperatures of similar to 500 K, and exhibits a temperature dependence that follows the Arrhenius law. The pyrolysis process initiates with the removal of -OH functional groups and -H atoms from aromatic C rings within the bulk phenolic resin to release H2O, followed by breaking of these C rings to release C-based fragments. Using the pyrolysis rates from MD simulations, we develop a thermal material response model applied to predict the heat transfer within a charring syntactic foam ablator. Our model predictions of the char thickness and temperature distributions, under a variety of heat loads, are in good agreement with prior experiments. (c) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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