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Non-thermal plasma-catalytic processes for CO2 conversion toward circular economy: fundamentals, current status, and future challenges

Ahmad Mukhtar, Sidra Saqib, Dinithi Mohotti, Robinson Ndeddy Aka, Md. Mokter Hossain, Ekow Agyekum-Oduro, Sarah Wu

2024Environmental Science and Pollution Research13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Practical and energy-efficient carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) conversion to value-added and fuel-graded products and transitioning from fossil fuels are promising ways to cope with climate change and to enable the circular economy. The carbon circular economy aims to capture, utilize, and minimize CO 2 emissions as much as possible. To cope with the thermodynamic stability and highly endothermic nature of CO 2 conversion via conventional thermochemical process, the potential application of non-thermal plasma (NTP) with the catalyst, i.e., the hybrid plasma catalysis process to achieve the synergistic effects, in most cases, seems to promise alternatives under non-equilibrium conditions. This review focuses on the NTP fundamentals and comparison with conventional technologies. A critical review has been conducted on the CO 2 reduction with water (H 2 O), methane (CH 4 ) reduction with CO 2 to syngas (CO + H 2 ), CO 2 dissociation to carbon monoxide (CO), CO 2 hydrogenation, CO 2 conversion to organic acids, and one-step CO 2 –CH 4 reforming to the liquid chemicals. Finally, future challenges are discussed comprehensively, indicating that plasma catalysis has immense investigative areas.

Topics & Concepts

Endothermic processSyngasCatalysisMethaneFossil fuelCarbon monoxideCarbon dioxideDissociation (chemistry)Circular economyChemistryEnvironmental scienceWaste managementChemical engineeringOrganic chemistryEngineeringAdsorptionBiologyEcologyPlasma Applications and DiagnosticsCatalytic Processes in Materials ScienceCO2 Reduction Techniques and Catalysts
Non-thermal plasma-catalytic processes for CO2 conversion toward circular economy: fundamentals, current status, and future challenges | Litcius