Chemical reactions occurring during direct solar reduction of CO2
Autor: | Reed J. Jensen, John L. Lyman |
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Rok vydání: | 2001 |
Předmět: |
Quenching
Carbon Monoxide Reaction mechanism Photolysis Environmental Engineering Photodissociation Temperature Water Carbon Dioxide Photochemistry Pollution Chemical reaction Chemical kinetics Kinetics chemistry.chemical_compound chemistry Carbon dioxide Sunlight Environmental Chemistry Physical chemistry Methanol Oxidation-Reduction Waste Management and Disposal Carbon monoxide |
Zdroj: | Science of The Total Environment. 277:7-14 |
ISSN: | 0048-9697 |
DOI: | 10.1016/s0048-9697(01)00829-4 |
Popis: | At high temperatures carbon dioxide may absorb solar radiation and react to form carbon monoxide and molecular oxygen. The CO, so produced, may be converted by well-established means to a combustible fuel, such as methanol. We intend to make a future demonstration of the solar reduction of CO2 based on these processes. This paper, however, addresses only the problem of preserving, or even enhancing, the initial photolytic CO by quenching the hot gas with colder H2O or CO2. We present model calculations with a reaction mechanism used extensively in other calculations. If a CO2 gas stream is heated and photolyzed by intense solar radiation and then allowed to cool slowly, it will react back to the initial CO2 by a series of elementary chemical reactions. The back reaction to CO2 can be terminated with the rapid addition of CO2, water, or a mixture. Calculations show that a three-fold quench with pure CO2 will stop the reactions and preserve over 90% of the initial photolytic CO. We find that water has one of two effects. It can either increase the CO level, or it can catalyze the recombination of O and CO to CO2. The gas temperature is the determining factor. If the quench gas is not sufficient to keep the temperature below approximately 1100 K, a chain-branching reaction dominates and the reaction to CO2 occurs. If the temperature stays below that level a chain terminating reaction dominates and the CO is increased. The former case occurs below approximately a fourfold quench with a water/CO2 mixture. The later case occurs when the quench is greater than fourfold. We conclude that CO2, H2O, or a mixture may quench the hot gas stream photolyzed by solar radiation and preserve the photolytic CO. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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