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Nitrogen fixation in pulsed microwave discharge studied by infrared absorption combined with modelling

Tijdschriftbijdrage - e-publicatie

A pulsed microwave surfaguide discharge operating at 2.45 GHz was used for the conversion of molecular nitrogen into valuable compounds in several gas mixtures: N-2:O-2, N-2:O-2:CO2 and N-2:CO2. The ro-vibrational absorption bands of the molecular species were monitored by a Fourier transform infrared apparatus in the post-discharge region in order to evaluate the relative number density of species, specifically NO production. The effects of specific energy input, pulse frequency, gas flow fraction, gas admixture and gas flow rate were studied for better understanding and optimization of the NO production yield and the corresponding energy cost (EC). By both the experiment and modelling, a highest NO yield is obtained at N-2:O-2 (1:1) gas ratio in N-2:O-2 mixture. The NO yield reveals a small growth followed by saturation when pulse repetition frequency increases. The energy efficiency start decreasing after the energy input reaches about 5 eV/molec, whereas the NO yield rises steadily at the same time. The lowest EC of about 8 MJ mol(-1) corresponding to the yield and the energy efficiency of about 7% and 1% are found, respectively, in an optimum discharge condition in our case.
Tijdschrift: Plasma sources science and technology
ISSN: 0963-0252
Volume: 30
Jaar van publicatie:2021
Trefwoorden:A1 Journal article
Toegankelijkheid:Open