Abstract

Steam reforming of aliphatic hydrocarbons such as methane, ethane, propane, and neopentane was investigated with two types of barrier discharge plasma reactors. With a ferroelectric packed-bed reactor ( FPR) in N/sub 2/, almost the same conversions were obtained for ethane, propane, and neopentane, but methane was less reactive than these hydrocarbons. Hydrogen gas yield decreased in the order: methane/spl ap/ethane>propane>neopentane. The molar ratio of H/sub 2/ to CO {[H/sub 2/]/[CO]} exceeded 3.5 for all the hydrocarbons. [H/sub 2/]/[CO] did not change in the range of H/sub 2/O content from 0.5% to 2.5%. At the volumetric ratio of H/sub 2/O to Hydrocarbon=2.0, carbon balances were poor for ethane, propane, and neopentane, but almost all of the carbon atoms in the reacted methane were recovered as CO and CO/sub 2/. The mole fractions of CO and CO/sub 2/ depended on the chemical structures of the substrate hydrocarbons. It is considered that the water-gas-shift reaction proceeds backward for the reaction systems of the hydrocarbons with higher hydrogen atom densities per molecule. FPR maintained the same performance for 10 h in the steam reforming of methane. The efficiency of a silent discharge plasma reactor was much lower than that of FPR.

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