| Literature DB >> 29170457 |
Petri Ajo1, Iakov Kornev2, Sergei Preis2.
Abstract
The highly energetic electrons in non-thermal plasma generated by gas phase pulsed corona discharge (PCD) produce hydroxyl (OH) radicals via collision reactions with water molecules. Previous work has established that OH radicals are formed at the plasma-liquid interface, making it an important location for the oxidation of aqueous pollutants. Here, by contacting water as aerosol with PCD plasma, it is shown that OH radicals are produced on the gas side of the interface, and not in the liquid phase. It is also demonstrated that the gas-liquid interfacial boundary poses a barrier for the OH radicals, one they need to cross for reactive affinity with dissolved components, and that this process requires a gaseous atomic H scavenger. For gaseous oxidation, a scavenger, oxygen in common cases, is an advantage but not a requirement. OH radical efficiency in liquid phase reactions is strongly temperature dependent as radical termination reaction rates increase with temperature.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29170457 PMCID: PMC5700971 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-16333-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Average dissolved TN evolution in air (blue) and nitrogen (red) atmosphere during PCD oxidation. The experiments were conducted at 13, 20 and 30 °C and at pulse frequencies of 300, 500 and 833 pps. E = specific plasma energy dose.
Figure 2Oxidation product evolution in oxidation of 17% aqueous acetone under N2.
Figure 3Oxalic acid oxidation at different temperatures and PCD pulse frequencies from initial concentration of 60 mg L−1. E = specific plasma energy dose.
Figure 4Oxalic acid reaction yield dependence on temperature and pulse frequency (zero order reaction 0…5 kWh m−3).
Figure 5Top section of the PCD reactor with the atomizer array spraying the water into the plasma zone and a schematic illustration of the experimental configuration. The latter depicts a reactor view parallel to the electrodes.