Hi Curiouscat,
I confirm the high autoignition temperature of hydrogen, higher than most hydrocarbons.
Yes, autoignition is measured with a mix. Often given as a function of the proportion; generally with air, but sometimes with oxygen, where hydrocarbons ignite just a few 10K earlier. The proportion easiest to light is generally near the stoechio in air, that is, making CO
2, and tends to be the chosen condition if not told. And yes, the mix catches fire when reaching this autoignition temperature (air heated by compression in a Diesel engine), or if ignited by some other means (spark in a gasoline engine).
Application: in a gasoline engine, the premix shall not ignite before the spark, so you want a high autoignition temperature, related with a high octane number; highly branched alkanes like isooctane achieve it, aromatics too. In a Diesel engine, the oil shall light easily when injected in the cylinder's hot air, so you want a low autoignition temperature, related with a high cetene number; long straight alkanes achieve it. And with a similar shape, longer alkanes are less volatile (determines much the flash point) but have a lower autoignition, so flame stability in a jet engine results from a mix of molecule sizes, kerosene being one good compromise (bringing also a low melting point and some more).
I haven't checked the detailed reasons for hydrogen's autoignition temperature, but:
- H-H holds with 436kJ/mol, versus variable 400 for C-H and variable 350 for C-C;
- Shocks with the too light H2 could be inefficient.
- Possibly (I'd need to think more at that one) longer molecules with more degrees of freedom can concentrate from time to time more heat energy in few atoms.