Systematic Evaluation of Plasma and Reactor Parameters in Non-Thermal Dielectric Barrier Discharge Plasma Ammonia Synthesis
Abstract
Dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasmas provide an electrified, nonequilibrium route to ammonia synthesis that can be directly powered by renewable electricity. Yet, the coupled effects of reactor geometry, operating conditions, and microdischarge influence on plasma characteristics and process performance remain poorly understood. Here we present a comprehensive study of N2-H2 conversion in a DBD reactor, systematically varying barrier thickness (1.0-2.0 mm and empty-cell reference), electrode and discharge gaps, applied voltage, gas composition, flow rate, and pulse timing parameters. Integrated diagnostics including Lissajous power analysis, microdischarge statistics, optical emission spectroscopy of N2, N2+, and NH, and colorimetric NH3 quantification, were combined with statistical correlation and machinelearning (Random Forest) analyses. We show that reactor geometry governs microdischarge charge and energy distributions through capacitive coupling, while residence time and pulse timing regulate excitation partitioning across electronic, ionic, and dissociative channels. Gas composition further determines the balance between nitrogen excitation and radical generation pathways. Ammonia yields correlate most strongly with NH(A→X) emission intensity and scale with microdischarge dynamics, linking discharge structure directly to nitrogen activation efficiency. This parameter-mapped framework provides mechanistic design rules for tuning plasma reactors and advances the development of sustainable, decentralized ammonia synthesis under mild conditions.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Green Chemistry Emerging Investigators Series
Please wait while we load your content...