Bulletin of the American Physical Society
75th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Monday–Friday, October 3–7, 2022;
Sendai International Center, Sendai, Japan
The session times in this program are intended for Japan Standard Time zone in Tokyo, Japan (GMT+9)
Session FF2: Green Plasma Science & Technology IV
10:00 AM–12:00 PM,
Friday, October 7, 2022
Sendai International Center
Room: Shirakashi 1
Chair: Tomohiro Nozaki, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Abstract: FF2.00001 : Interplay of Transport, Plasma Concentration, and Chemistry in Microwave Discharges
10:00 AM–10:15 AM
Presenter:
Gerard J Van Rooij
(Department of Circular Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Maastricht University, 6229 GS Maastricht, Netherlands)
Authors:
Gerard J Van Rooij
(Department of Circular Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Maastricht University, 6229 GS Maastricht, Netherlands)
Alex W van der Steeg
(DIFFER, 5612AJ Eindhoven, Netherlands)
Omar Biondo
(Research Group PLASMANT, Department of Chemistry, University of Antwerp, Universiteitsplein 1, Wilrijk B-2610, Belgium)
Ashley J Hughes
(DIFFER, 5612AJ Eindhoven, Netherlands;)
Annemie Bogaerts
(University of Antwerp)
M.C.M. van de Sanden
(DIFFER, 5612AJ Eindhoven, Netherlands;)
Large differences in temperature and composition are observed. In CO2, we measure temperatures below 4500 K in RV versus 6000 K in FV and consequently lower dissociation degrees in the plasma core for RV versus FV. In CH4, the macroscopic production of soot is entirely suppressed. It will be shown how these observations correlate with measured global gas conversion performance.
In effect, a decoupling of core temperature and composition with power density is achieved, enabling concentrated plasma conditions at different gas temperature. Furthermore, the work shows that plasma concentration results from a balance between ambipolar diffusion and recombination. Such aspects underline the importance of gas flow geometry for reactor parameters and it will be sketched how these can play an important role in future reactor engineering and design, in particular in relation with ongoing R&D for electrification of process industry.
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