• DocumentCode
    902154
  • Title

    Hydrogen peroxide and ozone formation in hybrid gas-liquid electrical discharge Reactors

  • Author

    Lukes, Petr ; Appleton, Austin T. ; Locke, Bruce R.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Chem. Eng., Florida State Univ., Prague, Czech Republic
  • Volume
    40
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2004
  • Firstpage
    60
  • Lastpage
    67
  • Abstract
    Ozone in the gas phase and hydrogen peroxide in the liquid phase were simultaneously formed in hybrid electrical discharge reactors, known as the hybrid-series and hybrid-parallel reactors, which utilize both gas phase nonthermal plasma formed above the water surface and direct liquid phase corona-like discharge in the water. In the series configuration the high voltage needle-point electrode is submerged and the ground electrode is placed in the gas phase above the water surface. The parallel configuration employs a high voltage electrode in the gas phase and a high voltage needle-point electrode in the liquid phase with the ground electrode placed at the gas-liquid interface. In both hybrid reactors the gas phase concentration of ozone reached a power-dependent steady state, whereas the hybrid-parallel reactor produced a substantially larger amount of ozone than the hybrid series. Hydrogen peroxide was produced in both hybrid reactors at a similar rate to that of a single-phase liquid electrical discharge reactor. The resulting concentration of H2O2 in the hybrid reactors, however, depended on the pH of the solution and the gas phase ozone concentration since H2O2 was decomposed by dissolved ozone at high pH.
  • Keywords
    chemical reactors; corona; discharges (electric); high-voltage techniques; hydrogen compounds; oxygen; ozone; pH; plasma chemistry; water treatment; H2O2; corona discharge; decomposition; direct liquid phase corona-like discharge; gas-liquid interface; high-voltage electrodes; hybrid gas-liquid electrical discharge reactors; hybrid-parallel reactors; hybrid-series reactors; hydrogen peroxide formation; nonthermal plasma; ozone formation; pH; water treatment; Chemical engineering; Chemical processes; Degradation; Electrodes; Inductors; Industry Applications Society; Plasma chemistry; Surface discharges; Voltage; Water pollution;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Industry Applications, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0093-9994
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TIA.2003.821799
  • Filename
    1268180