295 research outputs found
Energy dissipation and scattering angle distribution analysis of the classical trajectory calculations of methane scattering from a Ni(111) surface
We present classical trajectory calculations of the rotational vibrational
scattering of a non-rigid methane molecule from a Ni(111) surface. Energy
dissipation and scattering angles have been studied as a function of the
translational kinetic energy, the incidence angle, the (rotational) nozzle
temperature, and the surface temperature. Scattering angles are somewhat
towards the surface for the incidence angles of 30, 45, and 60 degree at a
translational energy of 96 kJ/mol. Energy loss is primarily from the normal
component of the translational energy. It is transfered for somewhat more than
half to the surface and the rest is transfered mostly to rotational motion. The
spread in the change of translational energy has a basis in the spread of the
transfer to rotational energy, and can be enhanced by raising of the surface
temperature through the transfer process to the surface motion.Comment: 8 pages REVTeX, 5 figures (eps
Divertor conditions relevant for fusion reactors achieved with linear plasma generator
Intense magnetized hydrogen and deuterium plasmas have been produced with electron densities up to 3.6¿×¿1020¿m-3 and electron temperatures up to 3.7¿eV with a linear plasma generator. Exposure of a W target has led to average heat and particle flux densities well in excess of 4¿MW m-2 and 1024¿m-2 s-1, respectively. We have shown that the plasma surface interactions are dominated by the incoming ions. The achieved conditions correspond very well to the projected conditions at the divertor strike zones of fusion reactors such as ITER. In addition, the machine has an unprecedented high gas efficiency
Enhancing CO2 plasma conversion using metal grid catalysts
The synergy between catalysis and plasma chemistry often enhances the yield of chemical reactions in plasma-driven reactors. In the case of CO2 splitting into CO and O2, no positive synergistic effect was observed in earlier studies with plasma reactors, except for dielectric barrier discharges, that do not have a high yield and a high efficiency. Here, we demonstrate that introducing metal meshes into radio frequency-driven plasma reactors increases the relative reaction yield by 20%–50%, while supported metal oxide catalysts in the same setups have no effect. We attribute this to the double role of the metal mesh, which acts both as a catalyst for direct CO2 dissociation as well as for oxygen recombination.</p
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