Transport and chemistry in CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ microwave plasma unraveled by \textit{in-situ} laser scattering.
ORAL
Abstract
Efficient dissociation of CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ to CO for fuel and chemicals production is studied in a vortex-stabilized microwave plasma reactor. Unprecedented detail in spatial distributions of temperature, internal energy, and species concentrations is obtained with \textit{in-situ} spontaneous Raman in scans of pressure (\textasciitilde 0.1 bar) and flow (10-20 slm) at 1 kW power. Dissociation fractions were typically lower compared to the chemical equilibrium for the measured core temperatures that ranged from 4500K to 6000K, which suggests particle replacement times as fast as several microseconds in plasma core. Peaking of oxygen molecules upstream from the region of atomic oxygen production indicates a central recirculation zone. Analysis of chemistry rates reveals minimal CO back reactions in the reactor and confirms quenching with CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ is the dominant O loss mechanism. Comparison of radial profiles of dissociation with global CO yield demonstrates where flow lines start to connect with the exhaust. These measurements demonstrate the importance of multidimensional transport for optimization of the plasma reactor.
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Authors
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Alex van de Steeg
DIFFER
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Pedro Viegas
DIFFER, DIFFER - Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research
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Floran Peeters
DIFFER
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Ana Sovelas da Silva
DIFFER
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Paola Diomede
DIFFER, DIFFER - Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research
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M.C.M. van de Sanden
DIFFER, DIFFER, Eindhoven, The Netherlands
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Gerard van Rooij
DIFFER