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Plasma activation of N-2, CH4 and CO2: an assessment of the vibrational non-equilibrium time window

Author
Abstract

Vibrational excitation potentially enhances the energy efficiency of plasma dissociation of stable molecules and may open new routes for energy storage and process electrification. Electron, vibrational and rotational temperatures were measured by in situ Thomson and Raman scattering in order to assess the opportunities and limitations of the essential vibration-translation non-equilibria in N-2, CO2 and CH4 plasma. Electron temperatures of 1.1-2.8 eV were measured in N-2 and CH4. These are used to confirm predominant energy transfer to vibrations after an initial phase of significant electronic excitation and ionization. The vibrational temperatures initially exceed rotational temperatures by almost 8000 K in N-2, by 900 K in CO2, and by 300 K in CH4. Equilibration is observed at the 0.1 ms timescale. Based on the vibrational temperatures, the vibrational loss rates for different channels are estimated. In N-2, vibrational quenching via N atoms is identified as the dominant equilibration mechanism. Atomic nitrogen population reaches a mole fraction of more than 1%, as inferred from the afterglow emission decay, and explains a gas heating rate of 25 K mu s(-1). CH4 equilibration at 1200 K is predominantly caused by vibrational-translational relaxation in CH4-CH4 collisions. As for CO2, vibrational-translational relaxation via parent molecules is responsible for a large fraction of the observed heating, whereas product-mediated VT relaxation is not significantly contributing. It is suggested that electronic excitation, followed by dissociation or quenching contributes to the remaining heat generation. In conclusion, the time window to profit from vibrational excitation under the present conditions is limiting practical application.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Plasma Sources Science and Technology
Volume
29
Issue
11
Number of Pages
115001
DOI
10.1088/1361-6595/abbae4
PId
f6e47fddb98c7dc485f019a09124d711
Alternate Journal
Plasma Sources Sci. Technol.
Label
OA
Attachment
Journal Article
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