DocumentCode :
511034
Title :
The decomposition of p-xylene in air by plasma-assisted catalysis
Author :
Piroi, D. ; Magureanu, M. ; Mandache, N.B. ; Parvulescu, V.I.
Author_Institution :
Plasma & Radiat. Phys., Nat. Inst. for Laser, Bucharest-Magurele, Romania
fYear :
2008
fDate :
7-12 Sept. 2008
Firstpage :
473
Lastpage :
476
Abstract :
The decomposition of p-xylene in contaminated air streams by using non-thermal plasma was studied in the absence and in the presence of AlAg catalysts. A dielectric barrier reactor packed with spherical quartz pellets was used at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. The conversion of p-xylene increased with increasing the specific input energy (SIE), reaching 66% for a SIE of 264 J/l. The main gaseous reaction products resulting from p-xylene decomposition were carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide, with selectivities towards CO2 of 44%, independent of the SIE, over the range investigated. The catalyst was placed downstream of the plasma reactor, in a catalytic reactor that was heated up to 500°C. The catalyst became active above 300°C, however xylene conversion was rather low in purely catalytic experiments, reaching 11% at the maximum temperature investigated. In the plasma-catalytic system, it was found that the catalyst addition had little effect on the conversion of p-xylene. However, the selectivity towards CO2 was significantly improved in the presence of AlAg catalyst as compared to the results obtained with plasma alone. The catalyst temperature influenced the CO2 selectivity as well. Above 300°C the CO2 selectivity reached 65-70%.
Keywords :
aluminium alloys; carbon compounds; catalysis; catalysts; discharges (electric); oxidation; plasma chemistry; silver alloys; AlAg; CO; CO2; air; atmospheric pressure; carbon dioxide; carbon monoxide; catalysts; catalytic reactor; contaminated air streams; decomposition; dielectric barrier discharge; dielectric barrier reactor; gaseous reaction products; nonthermal plasma; p-xylene; plasma reactor; plasma-assisted catalysis; plasma-catalytic system; pressure 1 atm; room temperature; specific input energy; spherical quartz pellets; temperature 293 K to 298 K; temperature 500 degC; Atmospheric-pressure plasmas; Carbon dioxide; Chemical lasers; Dielectrics; Electrodes; Inductors; Laser theory; Oxidation; Plasma chemistry; Plasma temperature;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Gas Discharges and Their Applications, 2008. GD 2008. 17th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Cardiff
Print_ISBN :
978-0-9558052-0-2
Type :
conf
Filename :
5379364
Link To Document :
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