2012 AIChE Annual Meeting
(640g) The Oxidative Power of Corona Discharge
The oxidative power of corona discharge
P.
Letonja, T. Friedrich, M. Siebenhofer
Graz University of Technology, Institute of Chemical Engineering and
Environmental Technology, Graz/Austria
Corona discharge, well known from electrostatic precipitation of particulate
matter, has proven applicable too in wastewater treatment as well as off-gas
purification.
Electrical discharge in gaseous medium depends on the basic gas
composition, the temperature, the gas velocity and the type of discharge
electrode. While precipitation of particulate matter needs plain electrodes to
avoid formation of noxious substances, application of corona discharge in
wastewater treatment is driven by needle discharge since oxidation power of
corona discharge depends on the effect of very high field intensity. Brush
electrodes are therefore the electrode type of choice. Because of the very
different current/voltage characteristic in comparison with plain wire type
electrodes brush electrodes provide significant UV-irradiation and ozone formation.
In the ongoing project oxidative precipitation of sulfur dioxide and
nitrogen oxide was investigated in a wet tube type electrostatic precipitator,
tube diameter was 76 mm, equipped with an 8 mm brush electrode of 0.7 m length.
Corona start up voltage was 10 kV. Close
to break through operation voltage of 21 kV the maximum specific corona current
of 6 mA/m was achieved. The ozone formation potential,
which depends on the gas flow rate, was about 300 ppm at 0.38 m/s gas velocity.
The UV254 -irradiation intensity was equivalent 5% of the electrical
power.
Nitrogen oxide is specified by extremely poor absorption properties. At
low concentration it can hardly be oxidized. For oxidative absorption nitrogen
oxide as well as sulphur dioxide need activation support.
Ambient air was spiked with either nitrogen oxide or sulfur dioxide and
fed to the ?corona discharge reactor?, which was equipped with an absorption
tower in series. The concentration of both constituents was varied between 100
ppm and 400 ppm. Figure 1 shows the result of a basic experiment for
NO-treatment.
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Figure 1: Oxidation and absorption of
nitrogen monoxide. Operation conditions: ambient air
spiked wit NO, gas velocity 0.25 m/s
The final product of the constituents is either aqueous sulphuric acid
or nitric acid.
Depending on the operation conditions the clean gas concentration of
both substances could even be kept at < 10 ppm. Since oxidation is overall
rate limiting modeling and scale up can refer to the design of plug flow
reactors, considering space charge effects via the gas velocity in the reaction
rate.
Based on the outcome of the project corona discharge seemingly offers a
powerful tool in advanced pollution control of gaseous as well as liquid constituents.
See more of this Group/Topical: Separations Division