| Literature DB >> 35539992 |
Harinarayanan Puliyalil1, Damjan Lašič Jurković1, Venkata D B C Dasireddy1, Blaž Likozar1.
Abstract
CO2 and CH4 contribute to greenhouse gas emissions, while the production of industrial base chemicals from natural gas resources is emerging as well. Such conversion processes, however, are energy-intensive and introducing a renewable and sustainable electric activation seems optimal, at least for intermediate-scale modular operation. The review thus analyses such valorisation by plasma reactor technologies and heterogeneous catalysis application, largely into higher hydrocarbon molecules, that is ethane, ethylene, acetylene, propane, etc., and organic oxygenated compounds, i.e. methanol, formaldehyde, formic acid and dimethyl ether. Focus is given to reaction pathway mechanisms, related to the partial oxidation steps of CH4 with O2, H2O and CO2, CO2 reduction with H2, CH4 or other paraffin species, and to a lesser extent, to mixtures' dry reforming to syngas. Dielectric barrier discharge, corona, spark and gliding arc sources are considered, combined with (noble) metal materials. Carbon (C), silica (SiO2) and alumina (Al2O3) as well as various catalytic supports are examined as precious critical raw materials (e.g. platinum, palladium and rhodium) or transition metal (e.g. manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel and copper) substrates. These are applied for turnover, such as that pertinent to reformer, (reverse) water-gas shift (WGS or RWGS) and CH3OH synthesis. Time-on-stream catalyst deactivation or reactivation is also overviewed from the viewpoint of individual transient moieties and their adsorption or desorption characteristics, as well as reactivity. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35539992 PMCID: PMC9083801 DOI: 10.1039/c8ra03146k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Properties of plasma in different reactor types. Table partially reconstructed from ref. 53 and 64–69
| Reactor type | DBD | Spark | Corona | Gliding arc | Arc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scheme |
|
|
|
|
|
| Electron energy [eV] | 1–30 | — | ∼5 | 1.4–2.1 | 1–10 |
| Electron density [cm−3] | 1012–1015 | 1014–1015 | 109–1013 | 1014–1015 | 1015–1019 |
| Current [A] | 1–50 | 20–30 | ∼10−5 | 0.1–50 | 30–30 000 |
| Gas temperature [K] | 300–500 | 400–1000 | ∼400 | 1000–3000 | 5 × 103–104 |
| Breakdown voltage [kV] | 5–25 | 5–15 | 10–50 | 0.5–4 | 10–100 |
Different electron collision reactions of CO2, CH4 and various common reagents, along with their required electron energies
| Reagents | Products | Interaction type | Electron energy required [eV] |
|---|---|---|---|
| CH4 + e | CH3˙ + H + e | Dissociation | 8.8 ( |
| CH4 + e | CH2˙+ H2 + e | Dissociation | 9.4 ( |
| CH4 + e | CH˙ + H2 + H + e | Dissociation | 12.5 ( |
| CH4 + e | C˙ + 2H2 + e | Dissociation | 14.0 ( |
| CH4 + e | CH4+ + 2e | Ionization | 12.6 ( |
| CO2 + e | CO + O + e | Dissociation | 5.5 ( |
| H2O + e | OH + O + e | Dissociation | 5.1 ( |
| H2 + e | H + H + e | Dissociation | 4.5 ( |
| O2 + e | O + O + e | Dissociation | 5.1 ( |
| O2 + e | O2+ + 2e | Ionization | 12.5 ( |
CH4 and CO2 valorisation in various non-catalytic plasma reactors. The table is divided into three subsections based on the chemistry of the process
| Feed gas ratio | Reactor setup | SEI [kJ mol−1] | Plasma temperature [K] | Conversion [%] | Products (selectivities [%]) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| 5% CH4, 95% N2 | DBD AC | 1094.4 | 500 | CH4 – 14.8% | C2H6 (10.6%) |
|
| C2H4 (0.7%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (0.8%) | ||||||
| C-3 (2%) | ||||||
| 5% CH4, 95% N2 | DBD pulsed | 224.64 | 500 | CH4 – 12.4% | C2H6 (6.5%) |
|
| C2H4 (0.3%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (0.3%) | ||||||
| C-3 (0.9%) | ||||||
| 5% CH4, 95% N2 | Spark AC | 172.8 | 1000 | CH4 – 49.4% | C2H4 (0.3%) |
|
| C2H2 (86%) | ||||||
| 5% CH4, 95% N2 | Spark pulsed | 322.56 | 1000 | CH4 – 83.0% | C2H6 (2.6%) |
|
| C2H4 (3.1%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (45.9%) | ||||||
| C-3 (0.7%) | ||||||
| 5% CH4, 95% N2 | Rotating arc | 61.92 | 1000 | CH4 – 25.8% | C2H6 (0.2%) |
|
| C2H4 (1.1%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (42%) | ||||||
| 5% CH4, 95% N2 | Gliding arc | 72 | 3000 | CH4 – 23.7% | C2H2 (27.2%) |
|
| 5% CH4, 95% N2 | Hollow cathode | 28.8 | 2000 | CH4 – 42.2% | C2H6 (1.4%) |
|
| C2H4 (1.4%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (27%) | ||||||
| C-3 (0.3%) | ||||||
| 21.2% CH4, 78.8% Ar | Gliding arc, 80 mm length | 2090 | — | CH4 – 43.4% | C-2 (87.2%) |
|
| 100% CH4 | Gliding arc, 20 kHz, 150 mm length | 273.6 | — | CH4 – 47% | C2H2 (22%) |
|
| 15% CH4, 85% Ar | Gliding arc, 20 kHz, 150 mm length | 165.6 | — | CH4 – 65% | C2H2 (7%) |
|
| 100% CH4 | DBD, 75 kHz, 1 mm gap, 40 mm length | 867 | — | CH4 – 18% | C2H6 (30%) |
|
| C2H4 (3%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (3%) | ||||||
| C-3 to C-5 (27%) | ||||||
| 100% CH4 | Spark, 5 mm gap, 50 Hz DC, 5 kV, pulsed | 1059 | 440 | CH4 – 65% | C2H4 (5%) |
|
| C2H2 (75%) | ||||||
| C-3 to C-5 (5%) | ||||||
| 100% CH4 | Microwave, 1 kHz pulses of 60 μs, 30 mbar | 963.5 | 1500–2500 | CH4 – 90% | C2H2 (80%) |
|
| 100% CH4 | Corona, 1–2 kHz | 3854.1 | — | CH4 – 72% | C2H2 (56%) |
|
| C4H2 (8%) | ||||||
| C2H4 (3%) | ||||||
| 100% CH4 | DBD | 4624.9 | — | CH4 – 38% | C4H10 (5%) |
|
| C2H2 (4%) | ||||||
| C2H6 (25%) | ||||||
| C3H8 (10%) | ||||||
| 50% He, 50% CH4 | DBD, 1.2 mm gap, 120 mm length, 3 kHz | 10 350 | ∼373 | CH4 – 18.4% | C2H6 (80.7%) |
|
| C2H4 (6.3%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (1.3%) | ||||||
| C3H8 (5.3%) | ||||||
| C-4+ (6.5%) | ||||||
| 10% CH4, 90% Ar | DBD, 3 mm gap, 4 mL volume, 10 kHz, 3–6 kV | 60 | — | CH4 – 13% | — |
|
| 10% CH4, 90% Kr | DBD, 3 mm gap, 4 mL volume, 10 kHz, 3–6 kV | 68.57 | — | CH4 – 23% | C2H6 (32%) |
|
| C2H4 (4%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (4%) | ||||||
| 100% CH4 | DBD, 8.8 mL volume, 10 kV, 20 kHz | — | — | CH4 – 55.0% | C2H6 (20.89%) |
|
| C2H6 (2.01%) | ||||||
| C3H6 (12.4%) | ||||||
| C-4 (11.54%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (4.85%) | ||||||
| 100% CH4 | DBD, 20 kHz, 3 mm gap, 13.6 mL volume, 40 kV, 20–50 kHz | 1296 | — | CH4 – 25.2% | C3H8 (4%) |
|
| C2H2 + C2H4 (12%) | ||||||
| C4H10 (19%) | ||||||
| C2H6 (34%) | ||||||
| 100% CH4 | DBD, 0.4 mm gap, 200 mm length, 6.4–8.6 kV | 3342 | 448 (wall) | CH4 – 25.1% | C-2 and C-3 (80.27%) |
|
| 100% CH4 | DBD, electrode with disks 5 mm apart | 7372.8 | — | CH4 – 10.2% | C2H6 (45%) |
|
| C3H8 (20%) | ||||||
| C2H4 (3%) | ||||||
| C2H2 (3%) | ||||||
| C-4 (10%) | ||||||
| C-5+ (12%) | ||||||
|
| ||||||
| 20% O2, 80% CH4 | DBD, 1 mm gap, 50 mL volume, 20 kV, 30 kHz, 2 bar | 530 | 353 (wall) | CH4 – 15% | CH3OH (22%) |
|
| 50% H2, 50% O2 | DBD, double dielectric barrier | 633.6 | — | O2 – 90.8% | H2O2 (32.2%) |
|
| CH4 – 66.4% | H2O (18.5%) | |||||
| 50% Ar, 42.5% CH4 7.5% O2 | DBD, 3.5 mm gap, 17.3 mL volume, 10 ns pulses, 440 Hz, 25 kV | 112 | — | CH4 – 30% | CH3OH (18%) |
|
| O2 – 96% | HCHO (2%) | |||||
| C-2 (20%) | ||||||
| 5% CH4, 5% N2O, 90% Ar | DBD, 2 mL volume, 1 mm gap | 1029 | 330 (wall) | CH4 – 32.2% | CH3OH (10%) |
|
| N2O – 53.8% | HCHO (25%) | |||||
| C2H6 (10%) | ||||||
| 75% CH4, 25% O2 | DBD, 4 mm, 688 cm2 electrode surface | 849.6 | 301 (cooling fluid) | CH4 – 24% | CH3OH (17%) |
|
| O2 – 74% | Methyl formate (5%) | |||||
| HCOOH (16%) | ||||||
| HCHO (13%) | ||||||
| C2H5OH (1%) | ||||||
| 80% N2, 10% CH4, 10% O2 | DBD, cooled, 1 mm ID, twisted metallic electrode, 75 kHz | 672 | 298 (cooling fluid) | CH4 – 45% | CH3OH (17%) |
|
| O2 – 83% | HCHO (3%) | |||||
| HCOOH (9%) | ||||||
| 50%CH4, 50% O2 | DBD, cooled, 1.5 mm ID, twisted metallic electrode, 10 kHz | — | 283 (cooling fluid) | CH4 – 12% | CH3OH (10%) |
|
| HCHO (15%) | ||||||
| HCOOH (14%) | ||||||
| 50% CH4, 50% air | DBD, 10 kV, 10 kHz, 0.5 mm gap, 600 mm winding spiral ground | 864 | — | CH4 – 30% | CH3OH (9%) |
|
| 16% CH4, 84% H2O | Capacitively coupled plasma, DC, 133–1333 Pa | 345.6 | — | CH4 – 5% | CH3OH (20%) |
|
| HCHO (6%) | ||||||
| C2H6 (19%) | ||||||
| 50% CH4, 50% H2O | DBD, 2–3 kV, 250–2000 Hz, 1.8 mm ID, 500 Hz pulses of 400 ns | 246.4 | — | CH4 – 10% | CH3OH (7.5%) |
|
| H2O – 5% | ||||||
|
| ||||||
| 67.4% CH4, 32.6% CO2 | DBD, 1.8 mm gap | 3600 | 338 (cooling fluid) | CH4 – 35% | Alcohols (5%) |
|
| CO2 – 20% | Acids (5%) | |||||
| C2H6 (19%) | ||||||
| C3H8 (9.3%) | ||||||
| C-4+ (9%) | ||||||
| 67.4% CH4, 32.6% CO2 | DBD, 1.1 mm gap, electrode with spacing | 3600 | 338 (cooling fluid) | CH4 – 55% | Alcohols (3%) |
|
| CO2 – 37% | Acids (8%) | |||||
| C2H6 (14%) | ||||||
| C3H8 (7.5%) | ||||||
| C-4+ (8%) | ||||||
| 66.8% CH4, 33.2% CO2 | DBD, 1 mm gap, 200 mm length, 25 kHz | 2400 | 333 (thermocouple in plasma) | CH4 – 64.3% | CH3COOH (5.2%) |
|
| CO2 – 43.1% | Propanoic acid (1%) | |||||
| CH3OH (0.3%) | ||||||
| C2H5OH (1.8%) | ||||||
| 50% CO2, 50% H2 | Surface discharge, 11 kV, 7 kHz | 518.4 | — | CO2 – 15% | DME (5%) |
|
| 50% CO2, 50% H2O | Negative corona plasma, 15 kV, 10.2 kHz | 6652.8 | 378 (thermostat) | CO2 – 18% | CH3OH (21%) |
|
| H2O – 14% | C2H5OH (13%) | |||||
Fig. 1Comparison of CH4 conversion rate and associated energy efficiencies for various plasma reactor types. Reproduced from ref. 77 with permission from Springer Nature, copyright 2013.
Fig. 2The effect of flow rate on product distribution (140 W, 7 kHz, 0.5 mm gap distance, ambient temperature, 1 bar, 1 : 1 CH4 : O2). Reproduced from ref. 107 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2009.
Fig. 3Schematic representation of CO2/CH4 reforming over (a and c) NiAl–C (calcinated); and (b and d) NiAl-PC (plasma treated prior to calcination) samples. Reproduced from ref. 161 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2008.
Fig. 4Schematic comparison of thermal and plasma catalytic surface processes. Reproduced from ref. 195 with permission from Springer Nature, copyright 2015.
Fig. 5CO2 conversion and energy efficiencies, measured during the plasma-catalysis CO2 dissociation, are shown for the NiO/TiO2 catalysts prepared by plasma treatment with different gases (O2, Ar, CO2). Reproduced from ref. 198 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2016.
Fig. 6(a) Reaction environments for the CH4 reforming and (b) profiles of CH4 conversions (XCH) and H2 yields (XH) at various reaction environments obtained via bulk temperature controls. Reproduced from ref. 200 with permission from American Chemical Society, copyright 2016.
Fig. 7Power of the partial discharge in the packed bed with different specific dielectric constant εs. Reproduced from ref. 219 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 1990.
Fig. 8Distributions of the electron impact ionization rate, averaged over time in one AC cycle, for different dielectric constants: (a) εr = 25, (b) εr = 300, (c) εr = 400, and (d) εr = 1000, for a helium discharge sustained at 20 kV with a 100 μm pore. Reproduced from ref. 223 with permission from American Chemical Society, copyright 2016.
Summary of CH4 and CO2 valorisation in various hybrid plasma catalytic reactors
| Feeding gas ratio | Reactor configuration | Conversion (CO2/HCs) | T (°C) | Packing material | Value added products and selectivity | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CO2 + H2 (1 : 3) | DBD; discharge gap 1 mm, | 14%/— | 100 | CuO/ZnO/Al2O3 | CH3OH (7–10%) |
| ||
| CO2 + C2H6 | DBD | NA/100% | RT | VO | HCHO (11.4%) |
| ||
| CO2 + CH4 (1 : 3) | DBD, 500W | C-2 | C-3 |
| ||||
| NA | Fleece | 11.3 | 8.7 | |||||
| NA | NaA | 13 | 10.3 | |||||
| NA | NaY | 12.3 | 10 | |||||
| NA | HY | 15.2 | 11 | |||||
| CH4 + CO2 + Heat flow of 14 + 1+ 65 mL min−1 | DBD, | C-2 | C-3 | C-4 |
| |||
| 23.3/19.5 | RT | La2O3/γ-Al2O3 | 42.9 | 12.4 | 5.6 | |||
| 32.0/20.9 | 200 | La2O3/γ-Al2O3 | 41.2 | 15.0 | 8.7 | |||
| 56.1/21.4 | 400 | La2O3/γ-Al2O3 | 39.5 | 11.7 | 5.3 | |||
| CO2 + CH4 (1 : 2) | Corona discharge with hollow Cu ground electrode; power 30 W, feed flow rate 25 mL min−1 | C-2 |
| |||||
| 16.7/43.4 | RT | γ-Al2O3 | 30.6 | |||||
| 22.1/24.5 | RT | 5% La2O/γ-Al2O3 | 70.6 | |||||
| 22/23.8 | RT | 0.1% Pd–5% La2O/γ-Al2O3 | 70.4 | |||||
| CH4 + air (1 : 1) |
| CH3OH |
| |||||
| —/25–26% | No effect | Plasma only | ∼7.6% | |||||
| 150 | Ceramic pellet (CP) | >8% | ||||||
| —/25–26% | 150 | Pt/CP | ∼9% | |||||
| —/25–26% | 150 | Fe2O3/CP | 10.66% | |||||
| —/25–26% | 150 | CeO2/CP | >8.5% | |||||
| CH4 + air (1 : 1) | DBD discharge gap = 2.5 mm, feed flow rate = 300 sccm | CH3OH |
| |||||
| —/24.5–25.5% | 150 | CP | ∼8.5% | |||||
| —/24.5–25.5% | 150 | CuO/CP | 9% | |||||
| —/24.5–25.5% | 150 | Fe2O3/CP | 10.1% | |||||
| —/24.5–25.5% | 150 | Fe2O3–CuO/CP | 11.3% | |||||
| CH4 + air |
| CH3OH |
| |||||
| —/35% | 150 | CuO/γ-Al2O3 | 2.5% | |||||
| —/36% | 150 | Mo–CuO/γ-Al2O3 | 3.5% | |||||
Catalyst in the afterglow.
Fig. 9Assembly of smaller reactor bundles for the industrial scale plasma scale processing (top) and the enlarged view of smaller reactor (bottom). Reproduced from ref. 246 with permission from Springer Nature, copyright 2003.