Hydrogen from Cellulose and Low-density Polyethylene via Atmospheric Pressure Nonthermal Plasma
Benard Tabu, Visal Veng, Heba Morgan, Shubhra Kanti Das, Eric Brack,, Todd Alexander, J. Hunter Mack, Hsi-Wu Wong, and Juan Pablo Trelles

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the effective production of hydrogen from cellulose and low-density polyethylene using a specialized atmospheric pressure nonthermal plasma reactor, with detailed diagnostics and analysis of efficiency and energy costs.
Contribution
It introduces a novel SDBD plasma reactor for hydrogen production from waste materials, providing detailed plasma diagnostics and performance metrics.
Findings
Maximum hydrogen production efficiency of 0.8 mol/kWh for cellulose
Energy cost of 600 kWh/kg H2 for cellulose, half that of LDPE
Effective hydrogen generation at near atmospheric pressure and low temperature
Abstract
The valorization of waste, by creating economic value while limiting environmental impact, can have an essential role in sustainable development. Particularly, polymeric waste such as biomass and plastics can be used for the production of green hydrogen as a carbon-free energy carrier through the use of nonthermal plasma powered by renewable, potentially surplus, electricity. In this study, a Streamer Dielectric-Barrier Discharge (SDBD) reactor is designed and built to extract hydrogen and carbon co-products from cellulose and low-density polyethylene (LDPE) as model feedstocks of biomass and plastic waste, respectively. Spectroscopic and electrical diagnostics, together with modeling, are used to estimate representative plasma properties, namely electron and excitation temperatures, number density, and power consumption. Cellulose and LDPE are plasma-treated for different treatment…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlasma Applications and Diagnostics · Electrohydrodynamics and Fluid Dynamics
