Lee Garam, Go David B, O'Brien Casey P
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, United States.
Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, United States.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2021 Dec 1;13(47):56242-56253. doi: 10.1021/acsami.1c18169. Epub 2021 Nov 17.
Nonthermal plasmas (NTPs) produce reactive chemical environments, including electrons, ions, radicals, and vibrationally excited molecules, that can drive chemistry at temperatures at which such species are thermally inaccessible. There has been growing interest in the integration of conventional catalysis with reactive NTPs to promote novel chemical transformations. Unveiling the full potential of plasma-catalytic processes requires a comprehensive understanding of plasma-catalytic synergies, including characterization of plasma-catalytic surface interactions. In this work, we report on a newly designed multimodal spectroscopic instrument combining polarization-modulation infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRAS), mass spectrometry, and optical emission spectroscopy (OES) for the investigation of plasma-surface interactions such as those found in plasma catalysis. In particular, this tool has been utilized to correlate plasma-phase chemistry with both surface chemistry and gas-phase products in situ (1) during the deposition of carbonaceous surface species via NTP-promoted nonoxidative coupling of methane and (2) during subsequent activation of surface deposits with an atmospheric pressure and temperature argon plasma jet on both nickel (Ni) and silicon dioxide (SiO) surfaces. For the first time, the activation of carbonaceous surface species by a NTP on Ni and SiO surfaces to form hydrogen gas and C hydrocarbons was directly observed, where both PM-IRAS and OES measurements suggest that they may form through different pathways. This unique tool for studying plasma-surface interactions could enable more rational design of plasma-stimulated catalytic processes.
非热等离子体(NTPs)产生包括电子、离子、自由基和振动激发分子在内的反应性化学环境,这些环境能够在这些物质热不可及的温度下驱动化学反应。将传统催化与反应性NTPs相结合以促进新型化学转化的兴趣日益浓厚。揭示等离子体催化过程的全部潜力需要全面理解等离子体-催化协同作用,包括等离子体-催化表面相互作用的表征。在这项工作中,我们报告了一种新设计的多模态光谱仪器,它结合了偏振调制红外反射吸收光谱(PM-IRAS)、质谱和光发射光谱(OES),用于研究等离子体-表面相互作用,如在等离子体催化中发现的相互作用。特别是,该工具已被用于原位关联等离子体相化学与表面化学以及气相产物,(1)在通过NTP促进的甲烷非氧化偶联沉积含碳表面物种期间,以及(2)在随后用大气压和温度氩等离子体射流对镍(Ni)和二氧化硅(SiO)表面的表面沉积物进行活化期间。首次直接观察到NTP在Ni和SiO表面上对含碳表面物种的活化以形成氢气和C烃,其中PM-IRAS和OES测量均表明它们可能通过不同途径形成。这种用于研究等离子体-表面相互作用的独特工具能够实现对等离子体刺激催化过程更合理的设计。