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]
Summary
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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