| Literature DB >> 28809823 |
Dirk van den Bekerom1, Niek den Harder1, Teofil Minea1, Nicola Gatti2, Jose Palomares Linares1, Waldo Bongers1, Richard van de Sanden3, Gerard van Rooij4.
Abstract
A flowing microwave plasma based methodology for converting electric energy into internal and/or translational modes of stable molecules with the purpose of efficiently driving non-equilibrium chemistry is discussed. The advantage of a flowing plasma reactor is that continuous chemical processes can be driven with the flexibility of startup times in the seconds timescale. The plasma approach is generically suitable for conversion/activation of stable molecules such as CO2, N2 and CH4. Here the reduction of CO2 to CO is used as a model system: the complementary diagnostics illustrate how a baseline thermodynamic equilibrium conversion can be exceeded by the intrinsic non-equilibrium from high vibrational excitation. Laser (Rayleigh) scattering is used to measure the reactor temperature and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) to characterize in situ internal (vibrational) excitation as well as the effluent composition to monitor conversion and selectivity.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28809823 PMCID: PMC5613793 DOI: 10.3791/55066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vis Exp ISSN: 1940-087X Impact factor: 1.355