Abstract
This study establishes the first low temperature kinetic model for plasma-assisted ammonia decomposition based on the experiment in a dielectric barrier discharge reactor, addressing the limitations in both conventional combustion chemical kinetics models and plasma models and improves the model prediction at low temperatures. By integrating the diagnostics with kinetic modeling, a multi-scale framework is developed which explicitly couples electron-impact reactions with excited Ar* pathways. The model uniquely achieves 53.4 % higher predictive accuracy than combustion models through systematic validation against measured concentrations. Key mechanistic insights reveal: (i) Plasma-driven processes predominantly govern the initial decomposition of NH3 and subsequent H2 formation, with direct electron-impact dissociation of NH3 accounting for over 95 % of the total H2 yield; (ii) Ar* serves dual roles as energy carrier (11.55 eV excitation) and reactive collision partner, enabling efficient energy transfer via quenching-induced NH3 decomposition (Ar*+H + NH3 → NH2 + 2H + Ar); (iii) N2 formation proceeds through NH2 dimerization (NH2 + NH2=N2H4) followed by sequential H-abstraction dehydrogenation (N2H4 → N2H3 → N2H2 → NNH → N2). These findings provide fundamental guidelines for designing plasma-assisted NH3 decomposition, demonstrating the viability of low-temperature on-demand hydrogen production with enhanced energy efficiency.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 136427 |
| Journal | Fuel |
| Volume | 405 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 1 Feb 2026 |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 7 Affordable and Clean Energy
Keywords
- Ammonia decomposition
- Chemical kinetic model
- Dielectric barrier discharge
- Non-equilibrium plasma
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