4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

Hydroxyl Radicals and Hydrogen Peroxide Formation at Nonthermal Plasma-Water Interface

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PLASMA SCIENCE
Volume 44, Issue 10, Pages 2084-2091

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TPS.2016.2547841

Keywords

Diffuse discharge; hydrogen peroxide; hydroxyl radical; liquid electrode; nonthermal plasma

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This paper investigated hydroxyl radicals and hydrogen peroxide formation under a needle-plate electrode configuration using positive-polarity dc discharges generated in air, nitrogen, and helium. The discharge mode in air and nitrogen was found to change above ultrapure water; initially, a nanosecond pulse discharge was observed, transitioning to a diffuse discharge due to the increasing conductivity of the water. The discharge in helium was a nanosecond pulse discharge and the repetition rate increased with increasing water conductivity. It was found that hydroxyl radicals contribute to 7%, 78%, and 70% of hydrogen peroxide formation when using the ultrapure water in air, nitrogen, and helium, respectively. It is suggested that hydroxyl radicals are formed by water reactions with energetic positive ions and the neutral particles, such as N-2(+), He+, O, H, and HO2. Part of hydrogen peroxide is directly formed from atoms and radical reactions with water in nitrogen and helium, while oxygen reactions are heavily involved for hydrogen peroxide formation in air. A fluorophotometry method, using terephthalic acid, was used to directly quantify the formation of hydroxyl radicals and compared with the tert-butanol method.

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