Abstract

In this study, a single dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) coaxial reactor was used to degrade 4, 4'-sulfonylbis (TBBPS) in water using greenhouse gas (CO2) and argon as the carrier gases. The investigation focused on CO2 conversion, reactive species formation, gas-liquid mass transfer mechanism, and degradation mechanism of TBBPS during the discharge plasma process. With the decrease of CO2/Ar ratio in the process of plasma discharge, the emission spectrum intensity of Ar, CO2 and excited reactive species was enhanced. This increase promoted collision and dissociation of CO2, resulting in a series of chemical reactions that improved the production of reactive species such as ·OH, 1O2, H2O2 and O3. These reactive species initiated a sequence of reactions with TBBPS. Results indicated that at a gas flow rate of 240 mL/min with a CO2/Ar ratio of 1:5, both the highest CO2 conversion rate (17.76%) and TBBPS degradation rate (94.24%) were achieved. The degradation mechanism was elucidated by determining types and contents of reactive species present in treatment liquid along with analysis of intermediate products using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry techniques. This research provides novel insights into carbon dioxide utilization and water pollution control through dielectric barrier discharge plasma technology.

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