| Frontiers in Physics | |
| CO2 Dissociation using the Versatile Atmospheric Dielectric Barrier Discharge Experiment (VADER) | |
| Earl eScime1  Michael Allen Lindon1  | |
| [1] West Virginia University; | |
| 关键词: Plasma Physics; plasma chemistry; dielectric barrier discharge; CO2 reduction; plasma chemical model; Atmospheric plasmas; | |
| DOI : 10.3389/fphy.2014.00055 | |
| 来源: DOAJ | |
【 摘 要 】
Dissociation of CO2 is investigated in an atmospheric pressure dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) with a simple, zero dimensional (0-D) chemical model and through experiment.The model predicts that the primary CO2 dissociation pathway within a DBD is electron impact dissociation and electron-vibrational excitation. The relaxation kinetics following dissociation are dominated by atomic oxygen chemistry.The experiments included investigating the energy efficiencies and dissociation rates of CO2 within a planar DBD, while the gas flow rate, voltage, gas composition, driving frequency, catalyst, and pulse modes were varied. Some of the VADER results include a maximum CO2 dissociation energy efficiency of 2.5 +/- 0.5%, a maximum CO$_2$ dissociation rate of 4 +/- 0.4*10^-6 mol CO2/s (5 +/- 0.5% percent dissociation), discovering that a resonant driving frequency of ~30 kHz, dependent on both applied voltage and breakdown voltage, is best for efficient CO2 dissociation and that TiO2, a photocatalyst, improved dissociation efficiencies by an average of 18% at driving frequencies above 5 kHz.
【 授权许可】
Unknown