INL scientist is harnessing the power of plasma

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Chromium6
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INL scientist is harnessing the power of plasma

Post by Chromium6 » Wed May 02, 2012 11:46 pm

INL scientist is harnessing the power of plasma

by Mike Wall, Research Communications Fellow

Most schoolchildren learn that everything in the universe is a solid, a liquid or a gas. But those lessons miss the fourth and by far most common state of matter: plasma.

nanoparticle feedstock

Kong’s Plasma Nanoparticle Fabricator (PNF) converts sand-size grains of feedstock material (shown here) to nanoparticles very efficiently, generating no byproducts.
Plasma is like a gas, but many of its atoms have been stripped of an electron or two. These positively charged atoms swim about in a crackling-hot sea of negatively charged loose electrons, making plasmas great electrical conductors.

Plasma is mysterious and powerful, the stuff of stars, of lightning. Scientists have harnessed it to make welding torches, fluorescent lights and bright, sharp big-screen TVs, as well as those glass novelty globes full of snaking purple current that make your hair stand on end when you touch them. But plasma can do more, much more, and Idaho National Laboratory's Peter Kong is giving the world a glimpse of its true potential.

Kong, technical lead for plasma processing at INL, has built a career of putting plasma to work. He's using it to mass-produce nanoparticles, a project that in August received $1 million in federal stimulus funding. He's also employing plasma to find ways to store hydrogen efficiently, and he'll soon start a project using plasma to convert natural gas, coal and heavy oil to gasoline and diesel. These last two efforts could help the United States break its addiction to foreign oil and, perhaps, to fossil fuels altogether.

A nanoparticle factory

Kong, a quiet, affable man who keeps a pair of soccer shoes in his INL office, first started working with plasma as a doctoral student at the University of Minnesota, where he studied under one of the top experts in the field.

"I found plasma to be a very interesting subject," he says, "one that could be applied to a lot of areas other than welding, cutting or spraying."

nanoparticle cloud

A cloud of alumina nanoparticles, cooling down at a rate of 1 million degrees Celsius per second, exits the PNF’s plasma plume.

One of these areas is the production of nanoparticles, bits of matter tens of thousands of times smaller than the diameter of a human hair. Because nanoparticles are so tiny, a high percentage of their constituent atoms are on their surfaces rather than hidden away inside. Surface interactions thus dominate the lives of nanoparticles, and as a result, nano-sized specks of a particular substance often have different physical and chemical properties than larger chunks. Scientists are just beginning to exploit nanoparticles, but they hold great promise in many applications, including anti-microbial and cancer-fighting drugs, stronger, corrosion-resistant materials and more efficient solar panels, fuel cells and batteries.

But nanoparticles can be difficult and expensive to make. Kong is hoping to change that with his unique Plasma Nanoparticle Fabricator, a man-sized conglomeration of cables and shiny steel that looks a bit like a robotic squid. Sand-size grains of material fed into the PNF get vaporized by a plasma arc exceeding 12,000 degrees Celsius, twice as hot as the surface of the sun. As the vapor exits the reactor's processing zone, the gas cools down so fast—a rate of 1 million degrees per second—that its atoms have very little time to glom together. Each atom clumps with only a few others, forming nanoparticles.

Other nanoparticle-production methods grind raw materials down, burn them up using fossil fuels or dunk them in various chemical baths. But Kong's PNF is a step above. It makes high-quality (very small and relatively uniform) nanoparticles more cheaply and can handle a wider range of raw materials. And, because it converts 100 percent of its feedstock to nanoparticles, it generates no byproducts. Other conventional plasma reactors can't come close to this conversion rate, which the PNF achieves with a much longer plasma arc. Also contributing are the higher, more uniform temperatures in the PNF's processing zones, and the fact that raw materials remain in these zones for longer periods of time.

At the moment, the PNF is in a pre-pilot stage. Kong and his team will use the newly awarded grant money to test and tweak the invention further. Within a couple of years, he hopes to build a bigger, more powerful version that is completely user-friendly, so that anyone can operate it with minimal training. And he wants the new, improved PNF to make even smaller, more uniform nanoparticles. This is possible, Kong says; he just needs to increase the velocity of the vapor coming out of the reactor, and cool it down faster—perhaps at 10 million degrees per second or even faster. He has ideas about how to do this but is not yet ready to discuss the details publicly.

nanoparticle end product

The resulting nanoparticles are high-quality and relatively uniform.
Sometime in the coming year, Kong may also begin work on a more specialized version of the PNF. He has a proposal in to the U.S. Army to manufacture nanocomposite materials for lightweight armors. Nanomaterials have great protective potential; the fine grain, high surface area and many boundaries of nanoparticles can greatly diffuse a projectile's impact. And they can form more bonds with each other than can larger building blocks, generating more strength.

"The material I want to develop and produce will have multi-hit capability, up to large-caliber small arms, such as a sniper rifle," Kong says. It's possible his proposed nanocomposite armor could work against heavier projectiles, too, according to Kong, but such capabilities would require more work and more testing.

Kong's armor would contain layered composite materials made of lightweight metal and ceramic nanoparticles. His team would manufacture these composites with a new, special PNF. Using the existing, general-purpose PNF wouldn't work, because the production of such materials is tricky and cannot tolerate any cross-contamination. Kong thinks the Army will make a decision about his proposal sometime during the current fiscal year.

Cracking heavy hydrocarbons


The PNF does not monopolize Kong's time. He recently signed on as a consultant to a large U.S.-based multinational corporation that wants to use microwave plasma to convert coal to liquid fuels such as gasoline and diesel. Kong brings a wealth of experience to the project. In the 1990s, he developed several plasma technologies to process hard-to-refine very heavy hydrocarbons, such as heavy crude oil, oil sands and oil shale. His methods activated natural gas into plasma, producing large amounts of hydrogen and super-reactive molecules called radicals. The radicals "cracked" heavy hydrocarbon molecules into lighter and shorter fragments, which then combined with the radicals and hydrogen atoms to form usable transportation fuels. Industry showed little interest in the technologies at the time, he says, because light, sweet crude — which is easier to process — was still abundant and cheap.

link to heavy hydrocarbon graph

Processing raw vacuum gas oil’s heavy hydrocarbons into transportation fuels using traditional methods requires many steps and consumes a great deal of energy.

That's no longer the case. In 2005, an Exxon-Mobil spokesman told The Boston Globe, "All the easy oil and gas in the world has pretty much been found." As a result, oil companies are increasingly turning their attention to heavy hydrocarbons. Finding efficient ways to process them could aid the American push for energy independence. The U.S. has the world's largest deposits of oil shale, by some estimates the equivalent of 2 trillion barrels of oil — enough to last 280 years based on current consumption rates. According to Kong, his plasma technology is simpler and, perhaps, more cost- and energy-efficient than traditional refining processes. Oil companies may yet come calling.

"This technology could revolutionize the entire refinery structure," he says.

Storing hydrogen

Kong is also working with a large multinational chemical company to find better ways to store hydrogen. Hydrogen, many researchers believe, has great potential to power vehicles, appliances and other devices. Further, it could help carry and convert energy generated by intermittent renewable sources like wind and solar, whose production does not always mesh with demand.

Before hydrogen can help wean the world off fossil fuels, however, scientists need to develop efficient ways to store it. Simply putting hydrogen in a tank to power a car or appliance is difficult, because the element is a gas at all but extremely low temperatures (its boiling point is -253 degrees Celsius). Tanks holding enough low-density hydrogen gas to power anything would have to be very large, in many cases prohibitively so. Hydrogen could be liquefied — either by compression or cooling — to bring tank size down, but this would require a great deal of energy and raise safety concerns, as elemental hydrogen is very reactive.

Chemical storage — in which hydrogen is locked into more complex molecules, then released later after exposure to heat and/or catalysts — strikes many scientists as more practical. But current technologies for making such chemical hydrides are complicated and energy-intensive. Kong is using plasma in an attempt to revolutionize the production process.

link to plasma-treated hydrocarbon graph

Applying a natural-gas plasma breaks vacuum gas oil’s long hydrocarbon chains, leading to the production of lighter molecules that form gasoline and diesel.
"The current method of making these complex chemical hydrides is a 13-step process," he says. "What we're working on is potentially a one- to two-step process." Eliminating so many steps involves tricky, difficult and unstable reactions, and Kong and his team are still working out the details.
The future

Kong is the first INL scientist to secure at least 20 patents. He has "about 26"—it must be hard to keep track when the numbers get so high—with several more pending. He was INL's Inventor of the Year in 2005, and the lab inducted him into its Hall of Fame in Inventorship in 2003. He has dedicated much of his career to plasma research, and a good deal of his success stems from his understanding of plasma's potential. Yet he feels there's a lot more to do, a lot more to learn.
"I think I'll be working with plasma until the day I retire," he says

https://inlportal.inl.gov/portal/server ... =DA_524529
On the Windhexe: ''An engineer could not have invented this,'' Winsness says. ''As an engineer, you don't try anything that's theoretically impossible.''

Chromium6
Posts: 537
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2011 5:48 pm

Re: INL scientist is harnessing the power of plasma

Post by Chromium6 » Thu May 03, 2012 12:06 am

Image

What is Gasification?


Gasification occurs in a Westinghouse Plasma Gasification System when carbon-containing feedstocks – such as municipal solid waste, industrial waste, biomass (wood chips, agricultural straw, etc.) – are exposed to extremely high temperatures (over 5,000°C/10,000°F) in the presence of controlled amounts of steam, air and oxygen.

Gasification Process

The feedstock reacts in the gasifier with the steam, air and oxygen to produce a synthesis gas (syngas) and slag. Syngas, composed primarily of carbon monoxide (CO), hydrogen (H2) and other gaseous constituents, and can be used for industrial purposes (as a substitute to natural gas).

Non-gaseous, inorganic components in the gasified feedstock (i.e., the rocks, dirt and other impurities which do not gasify) separate and leave the bottom of the gasifier as a glass-like slag. Slag, which is environmentally benign and resembles glass, is a marketable aggregate material with a variety of uses in the construction and building industries.



Plasma Gasification is Energy Efficient:


• Alter NRG Plasma Torches use 2% to 5% of the energy input
• Facility Exports 80% of the energy input to clean syngas (for every Btu of energy used internally - four to five Btu’s are produced)

http://www.alternrg.com/plasma_technolo ... sification
On the Windhexe: ''An engineer could not have invented this,'' Winsness says. ''As an engineer, you don't try anything that's theoretically impossible.''

Chromium6
Posts: 537
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2011 5:48 pm

Re: INL scientist is harnessing the power of plasma

Post by Chromium6 » Thu May 03, 2012 12:11 am

8th International Conference
on Plasma Assisted Technologies
(ICPAT)
February 18 -21, 2013

Brazilian Center for Physics Research (CBPF), Rua Dr. Xaviera Sigaud, 150. Urca, Rio De Janeiro, RJ. 22290-180. Tel: 55 21 2141-7417, http://www.cbpf.br.

ICPAT will provide a forum to present and discuss scientific and engineering aspects of different plasma based technologies, including plasma generation, fuels ignition, plasma assisted combustion, hydrocarbons conversion and activation, coal gasification and combustion, gases ionization, waste destruction for power generation, plasma enhanced propulsion, pollutions reduction, surface modifications, water, wood, and construction materials treatment, and production of hydrogen-enriched gases.

ICPAT will help to bridge a gap between theoretical investigations and industrial needs.

ICPAT will have at least 12 sections with further round tables:
1. Plasma Ignition and Flame Control
2. Plasma Generation, Diagnostics, and Modeling
3. Fuel Reformation and Activation
4. Plasma Flow Dynamics
5. Plasma Kinetics
6. Plasma Propulsion
7. Power Sources
8. New Plasma Effects and Perspective Applications
9. Coal, Bio-mass, and Waste into Energy Processing
10. Water Treatment
11. Plasma Treatment for Coatings and Surface Modification
12. Business Forum

ICPAT-8 will announce and honor new members of the International Council of Plasma Assisted Combustion Experts.

From 2009, because of limited number of oral presentations, it is combined with a poster session.

Submit your abstracts (see template - MS Word file, up to 500 words, Times New Roman 12 font + color pictures, including authors short CV and photo): by 31 October 2012 to Dr. Igor Matveev at i.matveev@att.net

Registration fee - 450 US Dollars, could be paid by credit card, by wire transfer, and by cash. In case of payment by credit card, please first send us a registration form and we will arrange an e-request + e-invoice through the PayPal payment system. For wire transfer, please send your registration form electronically or by fax and ask for the banking information. On site registration fee is 550 USD (cash only).

ICPAT-8 offers the Electronic Poster (EP) form of participation for scientists who, for some reason, cannot attend the forum and deliver their talks personally. This poster title and authors will be listed in the contents of the ICPAT book of abstracts and available for the ICPAT attendees in electronic format only. Authors of the EPs will be included in the plasma assisted combustion specialists data base, get an e-copy of the ICPAT-8 book of abstracts, and will also encouraged to provide (optionally) their Power Point Presentations (PPP) in pdf format to be distributed among the conference participants with the after-conference flash drives. The best EPs will be recommended for publication in the IEEE December 2013 Special Issue on Plasma Assisted Combustion.

Final paper deadline to publish in the IEEE
Plasma Assisted Combustion - 2013 Special Issue: 01 May 2013
Plasma Assisted Combustion - 2014 Special Issue: 01 April 2014

Conference Address:
Brazilian Center for Physics Research (CBPF), Rua Dr. Xaviera Sigaud, 150. Urca, Rio De Janeiro, RJ. 22290-180. Tel: 55 21 2141-7417, http://www.cbpf.br. <="" a="">


http://www.plasmacombustion.com/iwepac.html
On the Windhexe: ''An engineer could not have invented this,'' Winsness says. ''As an engineer, you don't try anything that's theoretically impossible.''

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