Experimental investigation of gas heating and dissociation in a microwave plasma torch at atmospheric pressure

Liu Su, Rajneesh Kumar, Babajide Ogungbesan, Mohamed Sassi

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23 Scopus citations

Abstract

Experimental investigations are made to understand gas heating and dissociation in a microwave (MW) plasma torch at atmospheric pressure. The MW induced plasma torch operates at 2.45 GHz frequency and up to 2 kW power. Three different gas mixtures are injected in the form of axial flow and swirl flow in a quartz tube plasma torch to experimentally investigate the MW plasma to gas energy transfer. Air-argon, air-air and air-nitrogen plasmas are formed and their operational ranges are determined in terms of gas flow rates and MW power. Visual observations, optical emission spectroscopy and K-type thermocouple measurements are used to characterize the plasma. The study reveals that the plasma structure is highly dependent on the carrier gas type, gas flow rate, and MW power. However, the plasma gas temperature is shown not to vary much with these parameters. Further spectral and analytical analysis show that the plasma is in thermal equilibrium and presents very good energy coupling between the microwave power and gas heating and dissociation. The MW plasma torch outlet temperature is also measured and found to be suitable for many thermal heating and chemical dissociation applications.

Original languageBritish English
Pages (from-to)695-703
Number of pages9
JournalEnergy Conversion and Management
Volume78
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2014

Keywords

  • Atmospheric pressure microwave plasma
  • Gas thermal dissociation
  • Optical emission spectroscopy
  • Plasma visualization

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