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DBD Plasma Combined with Different Foam Metal Electrodes for CO(2) Decomposition: Experimental Results and DFT Validations

In the last few years, due to the large amount of greenhouse gas emissions causing environmental issue like global warming, methods for the full consumption and utilization of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (CO(2)) have attracted great attention. In this study, a packed-bed dielectric barri...

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Autores principales: Li, Ju, Zhai, Xingwu, Ma, Cunhua, Zhu, Shengjie, Yu, Feng, Dai, Bin, Ge, Guixian, Yang, Dezheng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6915610/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31717939
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano9111595
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author Li, Ju
Zhai, Xingwu
Ma, Cunhua
Zhu, Shengjie
Yu, Feng
Dai, Bin
Ge, Guixian
Yang, Dezheng
author_facet Li, Ju
Zhai, Xingwu
Ma, Cunhua
Zhu, Shengjie
Yu, Feng
Dai, Bin
Ge, Guixian
Yang, Dezheng
author_sort Li, Ju
collection PubMed
description In the last few years, due to the large amount of greenhouse gas emissions causing environmental issue like global warming, methods for the full consumption and utilization of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (CO(2)) have attracted great attention. In this study, a packed-bed dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) coaxial reactor has been developed and applied to split CO(2) into industrial fuel carbon monoxide (CO). Different packing materials (foam Fe, Al, and Ti) were placed into the discharge gap of the DBD reactor, and then CO(2) conversion was investigated. The effects of power, flow velocity, and other discharge characteristics of CO(2) conversion were studied to understand the influence of the filling catalysts on CO(2) splitting. Experimental results showed that the filling of foam metals in the reactor caused changes in discharge characteristics and discharge patterns, from the original filamentary discharge to the current filamentary discharge as well as surface discharge. Compared with the maximum CO(2) conversion of 21.15% and energy efficiency of 3.92% in the reaction tube without the foam metal materials, a maximum CO(2) decomposition rate of 44.84%, 44.02%, and 46.61% and energy efficiency of 6.86%, 6.19%, and 8.85% were obtained in the reaction tubes packed with foam Fe, Al, and Ti, respectively. The CO(2) conversion rate for reaction tubes filled with the foam metal materials was clearly enhanced compared to the non-packed tubes. It could be seen that the foam Ti had the best CO(2) decomposition rate among the three foam metals. Furthermore, we used density functional theory to further verify the experimental results. The results indicated that CO(2) adsorption had a lower activation energy barrier on the foam Ti surface. The theoretical calculation was consistent with the experimental results, which better explain the mechanism of CO(2) decomposition.
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spelling pubmed-69156102019-12-24 DBD Plasma Combined with Different Foam Metal Electrodes for CO(2) Decomposition: Experimental Results and DFT Validations Li, Ju Zhai, Xingwu Ma, Cunhua Zhu, Shengjie Yu, Feng Dai, Bin Ge, Guixian Yang, Dezheng Nanomaterials (Basel) Article In the last few years, due to the large amount of greenhouse gas emissions causing environmental issue like global warming, methods for the full consumption and utilization of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (CO(2)) have attracted great attention. In this study, a packed-bed dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) coaxial reactor has been developed and applied to split CO(2) into industrial fuel carbon monoxide (CO). Different packing materials (foam Fe, Al, and Ti) were placed into the discharge gap of the DBD reactor, and then CO(2) conversion was investigated. The effects of power, flow velocity, and other discharge characteristics of CO(2) conversion were studied to understand the influence of the filling catalysts on CO(2) splitting. Experimental results showed that the filling of foam metals in the reactor caused changes in discharge characteristics and discharge patterns, from the original filamentary discharge to the current filamentary discharge as well as surface discharge. Compared with the maximum CO(2) conversion of 21.15% and energy efficiency of 3.92% in the reaction tube without the foam metal materials, a maximum CO(2) decomposition rate of 44.84%, 44.02%, and 46.61% and energy efficiency of 6.86%, 6.19%, and 8.85% were obtained in the reaction tubes packed with foam Fe, Al, and Ti, respectively. The CO(2) conversion rate for reaction tubes filled with the foam metal materials was clearly enhanced compared to the non-packed tubes. It could be seen that the foam Ti had the best CO(2) decomposition rate among the three foam metals. Furthermore, we used density functional theory to further verify the experimental results. The results indicated that CO(2) adsorption had a lower activation energy barrier on the foam Ti surface. The theoretical calculation was consistent with the experimental results, which better explain the mechanism of CO(2) decomposition. MDPI 2019-11-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6915610/ /pubmed/31717939 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano9111595 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Li, Ju
Zhai, Xingwu
Ma, Cunhua
Zhu, Shengjie
Yu, Feng
Dai, Bin
Ge, Guixian
Yang, Dezheng
DBD Plasma Combined with Different Foam Metal Electrodes for CO(2) Decomposition: Experimental Results and DFT Validations
title DBD Plasma Combined with Different Foam Metal Electrodes for CO(2) Decomposition: Experimental Results and DFT Validations
title_full DBD Plasma Combined with Different Foam Metal Electrodes for CO(2) Decomposition: Experimental Results and DFT Validations
title_fullStr DBD Plasma Combined with Different Foam Metal Electrodes for CO(2) Decomposition: Experimental Results and DFT Validations
title_full_unstemmed DBD Plasma Combined with Different Foam Metal Electrodes for CO(2) Decomposition: Experimental Results and DFT Validations
title_short DBD Plasma Combined with Different Foam Metal Electrodes for CO(2) Decomposition: Experimental Results and DFT Validations
title_sort dbd plasma combined with different foam metal electrodes for co(2) decomposition: experimental results and dft validations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6915610/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31717939
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano9111595
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