Abstract

Plasma-liquid interaction is a critical area of plasma science and a knowledge bottleneck for many promising applications. In this paper, the interaction between a surface air discharge and its downstream sample of deionized water is studied with a system-level computational model, which has previously reached good agreement with experimental results. Our computational results reveal that the plasma-induced aqueous species are mainly H+, nitrate, nitrite, H2O2 and O3. In addition, various short-lived aqueous species are also induced, regardless whether they are generated in the gas phase first. The production/loss pathways for aqueous species are quantified for an air gap width ranging from 0.1 to 2 cm, of which heterogeneous mass transfer and liquid chemistry are found to play a dominant role. The short-lived reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) are strongly coupled in liquid-phase reactions: NO3 is an important precursor for short-lived ROS, and in turn OH, O2− and HO2 play a crucial role for the production of short-lived RNS. Also, heterogeneous mass transfer depends strongly on the air gap width, resulting in two distinct scenarios separated by a critical air gap of 0.5 cm. The liquid chemistry is significantly different in these two scenarios.

Highlights

  • In this paper, the interaction between a surface air discharge and the downstream dish of deionized water is studied

  • From our system-level simulation, a large amount of O3, H2O2, N2O, N2O5, HNO2 and HNO3 can transfer from the gas phase into the deionized water

  • Aqueous reactive species induced by the surface air discharge are mainly H+, O3, H2O2, nitrite and nitrate, consistent with those reported in literature[11,12]

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Summary

Introduction

The interaction between a surface air discharge and the downstream dish of deionized water is studied. The system-level model is used to study how aqueous chemistry may be modulated by varying the air gap width from Lg = 0.1 cm to 2 cm. This air gap range covers most application scenarios of the surface air discharge, for which heterogeneous mass transfer changes dramatically because of some short-lived species, such as HO2, having diffusion distances between 0.1 cm and 1 cm in air gap[10]. The surface air plasma and the deionized water are well sealed by an organic glass box, which has a fixed chamber volume of ~493 cm[3]

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