How activated carbon improves the performance of non-thermal plasma removing methyl ethyl ketone from a gas stream

Abstract

The combination of non-thermal plasma (NTP), operated at room temperature and at atmospheric pressure in air and in combination with activated carbon filters offers a more efficient removal of VOCs from gas streams than each individual method alone. Efficiencies, synergies and mechanisms of this combination were investigated by means of comprehensive quantitative Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy analysis. Therefore, dry and wet synthetic air containing about 90 ppm of methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) were treated with non-thermal plasma (NTP) and an intentionally undersized activated carbon (AC) filter, separately and in combination. As a result, removal of about 50 % was achieved for NTP or AC alone but a removal close to 95 % was found for the combination. Ozone, generated by the NTP, was reduced by 55 % with the AC-filter. For the operation of the NTP with humid air, a decomposition of the pollutant on AC was observed even after the plasma was switched off.

Description
Keywords
Activated carbon, Humidity, Methyl ethyl ketone, Non-thermal plasma, Ozone
Citation
Schmidt, M., Kettlitz, M., & Kolb, J. F. (2021). How activated carbon improves the performance of non-thermal plasma removing methyl ethyl ketone from a gas stream. 4. https://doi.org//10.1016/j.clet.2021.100234
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported