Issue 45, 2016

CO2 decomposition in a packed DBD plasma reactor: influence of packing materials

Abstract

Carbon dioxide (CO2) decomposition has drawn significant interest over the years due to its global warming potential. A packed bed dielectric barrier discharge reactor has been designed and tested for the conversion of CO2 into carbon monoxide (CO). The discharge volume was filled with different packing materials (glass beads, alumina, anatase titania, ceria) so as to understand the influence of dielectric constant, porosity and ultraviolet light. Typical results indicated that the packed bed DBD promotes CO2 conversion into CO and oxygen and CeO2 packing showed the highest conversion (10.6%) at a specific input energy of 4.8 J mL−1. The best performance of CeO2 may be due to oxygen vacant sites, which stabilize the atomic oxygen formed in the reaction and thereby promoting CO2 conversion. During the present study, CO2 decomposition has been achieved at ∼0.139 eV per molecule.

Graphical abstract: CO2 decomposition in a packed DBD plasma reactor: influence of packing materials

Associated articles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Dec 2015
Accepted
13 Apr 2016
First published
14 Apr 2016

RSC Adv., 2016,6, 39492-39499

CO2 decomposition in a packed DBD plasma reactor: influence of packing materials

D. Ray and Ch. Subrahmanyam, RSC Adv., 2016, 6, 39492 DOI: 10.1039/C5RA27085E

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