18 research outputs found
Plasma-catalyst interaction studied in a single pellet DBD reactor: Dielectric constant effect on plasma dynamics
A novel single dielectric pellet DBD that is designed to facilitate studying the interaction
between plasmas and catalysts is presented. The influence of material dielectric constant on
plasma dynamics across a range of applied voltages is determined through the use of electrical
characterisation combined with videos of the discharge. Different discharge modes in nitrogen
are observed and their behaviour is characterised. A particular focus is given to the phenomenon
known as âpartial dischargingâ. This is where incomplete plasma formation occurs between the
electrodes of the reactor, which may have implications for the fair testing of catalysts in packed
bed reactors. Additionally, the occurrence of an âalmond shapedâ QV plot in the event of pointto-point
discharging in PBRs is explained. This work provides easily implemented analytical
techniques that can be applied to understand the behaviour of plasmas within packed bed DBD
reactors
Subdynamic asymptotic behavior of microfluidic valves
Decreasing the Reynolds number of microfluidic
no-moving-part flow control valves considerably below the usual operating range leads to a distinct âsubdynamicâ regime of viscosity- dominated flow, usually entered through a clearly defined transition. In this regime, the dynamic effects on which the operation of large-scale no-moving-part fluidic valves is based, cease to be useful, but fluid may be driven through the valve (and any
connected load) by an applied pressure difference, maintained by an external pressure regulator. Reynolds number ceases to characterize the valve operation, but the driving pressure effect is usefully characterized by a newly introduced dimensionless number and it is this parameter which determines the valve behavior. This summary paper presents information about the subdynamic regime using data (otherwise difficult to access) obtained for several recently developed flow control valves. The purely subdynamic regime is an extreme. Most present-day microfluidic valves are operated at higher Re, but the paper shows that the laws governing subdynamic flows provide relations useful as an asymptotic reference
Integrated CO2 capture and utilization using non-thermal plasmolysis
In this work, two simple processes for carbon dioxide (CO2) such as capture and utilization have been combined to form a whole systems approach to carbon capture and utilization (CCU). The first stage utilizes a pressure swing adsorption (PSA) system, which offers many benefits over current amine technologies. It was found that high selectivity can be achieved with rapid adsorption/desorption times while employing a cheap, durable sorbent that exhibits no sorbent losses and is easily regenerated by simple pressure drops. The PSA system is capable of capturing and upgrading the CO2 concentration of a waste gas stream from 12.5% to a range of higher purities. As many CCU end processes have some tolerance toward impurities in the feed, in the form of nitrogen (N2), for example, this is highly advantageous for this PSA system since CO2 purities in excess of 80% can be achieved with only a few steps and minimal energy input. Non-thermal plasma is one such technology that can tolerate, and even benefit from, small N2 impurities in the feed, therefore a 100% pure CO2 stream is not required. The second stage of this process deploys a nanosecond pulsed corona discharge reactor to split the captured CO2 into carbon monoxide (CO), which can then be used as a chemical feedstock for other syntheses. Corona discharge has proven industrial applications for gas cleaning and the benefit of pulsed power reduces the energy consumption of the system. The wire-in-cylinder geometry concentrates the volume of gas treated into the area of high electric field. Previous work has suggested that moderate conversions can be achieved (9%), compared to other non-thermal plasma methods, but with higher energy efficiencies (>60%)
Development of a microfluidic unit for sequencing fluid samples for composition analysis
A microfluidic sample-sequencing unit was developed as a part of a high-throughput catalyst screening facility. It may find applications wherever a fluid is to be selected
for analysis from any one of several sources, such as microreactors operating in parallel. The novel feature is that the key components are fluidic valves having no moving parts and operating at very low sample flow Reynolds numbers, typically below 100. The inertial
effects utilized in conventional no-moving-part fluidics are nearly absent; instead, the flows are pressure-driven. Switching between input channels is by high-Reynolds-number control flows, the jet pumping effect of which simultaneously cleans the downstream cavities to prevent crosscontamination between the samples. In the configuration discussed here, the integrated circuit
containing an array of 16 valves is etched into an 84mm diameter stainless steel foil. This is clamped into a massive assembly containing 16 mini-reactors operated at up to 400C and 4 MPa. This paper describes the design basis and experience with prototypes. Results of CFD
analysis, with scrutiny of some discrepancies when compared with flow visualization, is included
Utilising carbon dioxide for transport fuels : the economic and environmental sustainability of different Fischer-Tropsch process designs
Producing fuels and chemicals from carbon dioxide (CO2) could reduce our dependence on fossil resources and help towards climate change mitigation. This study evaluates the sustainability of utilising CO2 for production of transportation fuels. The CO2 feedstock is sourced from anaerobic digestion of sewage sludge and the fuels are produced in the Fischer-Tropsch (FT) process. Using life cycle assessment, life cycle costing and profitability analysis, the study considers four different process designs and a range of plant capacities to explore the effect of the economies of scale. For large-scale plants (1,670âŻt/day), the FT fuels outperform fossil diesel in all environmental impacts across all the designs, with several impacts being net-negative. The only exceptions are ozone depletion, for which fossil diesel is the best option, and global warming potential (GWP), which is lower for fossil diesel for some process designs. Optimising the systems reduces the GWP of FT fuels in the best case by 70% below that of fossil diesel. Assuming a replacement of 9.75â12.4% of fossil diesel consumed in the UK by 2,032, as stipulated by policy, would avoid 2â8âŻMt of CO2 eq./yr, equivalent to 2â8% of annual emissions from transportation. However, these fuels are not economically viable and matching diesel pump price would require subsidies of 35â79% per litre. Optimising production yields would allow decreasing the subsidies to 8%. Future research should be aimed at technology improvements to optimise these systems as well as evaluating different policy mechanisms needed to stimulate markets for CO2-derived fuels
Effect of Weld Schedule on the Residual Stress Distribution of Boron Steel Spot Welds
Press-hardened boron steel has been utilized in anti-intrusion systems in automobiles, providing high strength and weight-saving potential through gage reduction. Boron steel spot welds exhibit a soft heat-affected zone which is surrounded by a hard nugget and outlying base material. This soft zone reduces the strength of the weld and makes it susceptible to failure. Additionally, different welding regimes lead to significantly different hardness distributions, making failure prediction difficult. Boron steel sheets, welded with fixed and adaptive schedules, were characterized. These are the first experimentally determined residual stress distributions for boron steel resistance spot welds which have been reported. Residual strains were measured using neutron diffraction, and the hardness distributions were measured on the same welds. Additionally, similar measurements were performed on spot welded DP600 steel as a reference material. A correspondence between residual stress and hardness profiles was observed for all welds. A significant difference in material properties was observed between the fixed schedule and adaptively welded boron steel samples, which could potentially lead to a difference in failure loads between the two boron steel welds