Dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasma is a promising technology for catalysis due to its low‐temperature operation, cost‐effectiveness, and silent operation. This review comprehensively analyzes the design and operational parameters of DBD plasma reactors for three key catalytic applications: CH4conversion, CO2splitting, and dry reforming of methane (DRM). While catalyst selection is crucial for achieving desired product selectivity, reactor design and reaction parameters such as discharge power, electrode gap, reactor length, frequency, dielectric material thickness, and feed gas flow rate, significantly influence discharge characteristics and reaction mechanisms. This review also explores the influence of less prominent factors, such as electrode shape and applied voltage waveforms. Additionally, this review addresses the challenges of DBD plasma catalysis, including heat loss, temperature effects on discharge characteristics, and strategies for enhancing overall efficiency. 
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                            Importance of gas heating in capacitively coupled radiofrequency plasma-assisted synthesis of carbon nanomaterials
                        
                    
    
            Abstract In pursuit of diamond nanoparticles, a capacitively-coupled radio frequency flow-through plasma reactor was operated with methane-argon gas mixtures. Signatures of the final product obtained microscopically and spectroscopically indicated that the product was an amorphous form of graphite. This result was consistent irrespective of combinations of the macroscopic reactor settings. To explain the observed synthesis output, measurements of C2and gas properties were carried out by laser-induced fluorescence and optical emission spectroscopy. Strikingly, the results indicated a strong gas temperature gradient of 100 K per mm from the center of the reactor to the wall. Based on additional plasma imaging, a model of hot constricted region (filamentation region) was then formulated. It illustrated that, while the hot constricted region was present, the bulk of the gas was not hot enough to facilitate diamondsp3formation: characterized by much lower reaction rates, when compared tosp2,sp3formation kinetics are expected to become exponentially slow. This result was further confirmed by experiments under identical conditions but with a H2/CH4mixture, where no output material was detected: if graphiticsp2formation was expected as the main output material from the methane feedstock, atomic hydrogen would then be expected to etch it awayin situ, such that the net production of thatsp2-hybridized solid material is nearly a zero. Finally, the crucial importance of gas heating was corroborated by replacing RF with microwave source whereby facilesp3production was attained with H2/CH4gas mixture. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 2333452
- PAR ID:
- 10633958
- Publisher / Repository:
- IOP Publishing
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics
- Volume:
- 57
- Issue:
- 47
- ISSN:
- 0022-3727
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 475205
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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