negatifzeo said:
Hydrogen, in the presence of oxygen, will combust when exposed to a heat source and form water. At least this is what I have gathered from some googling. But I haven't been given a satisfactory, detailed explanation as to why this occurs. Would anyone here be willing to describe this process to me? Also, would it be possible to combine H and O to form water without an explosion? Thank you.
The reaction between hydrogen and oxygen is a very complicated reaction system known as a branched radical chain system.
It starts with a free radical from the environment -- usually •OH
We then have
•OH + H
2 --> H
2O + H•
H• + O
2 --> •OH + O
the free radicals, marked with •, are very reactive chemical species that will undergo reaction on nearly every collision. Usually if a free radical is a reactant in a reaction step like the two immediately above, then another free radical is formed as a product, and the reaction carries on as a normal chain reaction.
But oxygen reactions are different.
H• + O
2 + M --> HO
2• + M
and the peroxy radical HO2• , formed in a 3-body collision, is much less reactive than the other free radicals in this particular system.
BUT
O + H
2 --> •OH + •H
is another reaction that also happens readily, and this step creates new free radicals. This reaction step makes the possibility of the number of very reactive free radicals increasing very rapidly, and the reaction can rapidly build up speed and intensity (a very similar process to the multiplication of neutrons in a nuclear explosion), leading to a radical explosion.
Whether or not an explosion occurs depends on the relative weights of these last two steps in the mechanism, and on the possibilities for removal of free radicals by vessel walls or other surfaces, or slower deactivation steps with the peroxy radicals.
The very high temperature of a hydrogen flame brings nitrogen from the air into the action:
N
2 + O
2 <==> 2 NO
Nitric oxide is actually a very unreactive free radical, but it will react with the peroxy radical to bring it back into the action:
NO + HO
2• --> NO
2 + •OH
Reactions with oxygen always suffer these sorts of complications, and the possibility of explosion of any fuel in an oxygen/air fire is always a very real one. The detail of the hydrogen combustion is better understood than most others.