DocumentCode :
1390500
Title :
Adsorption and Plasma Decomposition of Gaseous Acetaldehyde on Fibrous Activated Carbon
Author :
Ohshima, Takayuki ; Kondo, Tomomi ; Kitajima, Nobuyoshi ; Sato, Masayuki
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Chem. & Environ. Eng., Gunma Univ., Kiryu, Japan
Volume :
46
Issue :
1
fYear :
2010
Firstpage :
23
Lastpage :
28
Abstract :
In this paper, adsorption and nonthermal plasma decomposition of gaseous acetaldehyde were studied using barrier-discharge plasma reactor, in which fibrous activated-carbon textile (ACT) was used as both an electrode and adsorbent. The acetaldehyde molecule was adsorbed on ACT depending on the concentration of gaseous acetaldehyde. When acetaldehyde concentration was 500 ppm or lower, the amount of adsorbed acetaldehyde was estimated by Henry´s equation. The adsorbed acetaldehyde on ACT sheet was decomposed by the barrier-discharge plasma generated by applying high-voltage ac regulated by a neon transformer. When 200 ppm of acetaldehyde was fed continuously to the plasma reactor, 30, 45, and 120 ppm of acetaldehyde remained, with applied voltage of 13, 10, and 5 kVp, respectively. We also checked electric energy efficiency on the decomposition of acetaldehyde. Although 10 or 13 kVp of plasma has the same energy efficiency, 5 kVp of plasma was less effective for the decomposition because of unstableness of plasma generation. These results suggested that 10 kVp or more high-voltage ac is suitable for the decomposition of acetaldehyde by using ACT as the high-voltage electrode.
Keywords :
activated carbon; adsorption; discharges (electric); dissociation; organic compounds; plasma applications; plasma chemistry; C; Henry equation; acetaldehyde molecule; adsorbent; adsorption; barrier-discharge plasma reactor; electric energy efficiency; fibrous activated-carbon textile; gaseous acetaldehyde concentration; high-voltage electrode; neon transformer; nonthermal plasma decomposition; plasma generation; voltage 10 kV; voltage 13 kV; voltage 5 kV; Carbon dioxide; Chemical engineering; Electrodes; Energy efficiency; Equations; Inductors; Industry Applications Society; Plasma chemistry; Plasma materials processing; Textiles; Acetaldehyde; activated carbon; adsorption; barrier discharge; component; decomposition;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Industry Applications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0093-9994
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TIA.2009.2036525
Filename :
5393250
Link To Document :
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