The article illustrates the synergy between theoretical/computational advances and advanced experimental achievements to pursue green chemistry and circular economy technological implementations. The specific green chemistry focus concerns the production of carbon neutral fuels by converting waste carbon dioxide into methane. Both theoretical-computational and technological means were adopted to design a functional option implementing a heterogeneous catalysis process (Paul Sabatier (PS) catalytic reduction) to convert carbon dioxide into methane, and to further drive its evolution towards the employment of an alternative homogeneous gas phase plasma assisted technology. The details of both the theoretical and the experimental components of the study are presented and discussed. Future potential developments, including industrial ones, are outlined that are also from innovative collaborative economic prosumer model perspectives.
This paper reports on the characterization of the stereo-dynamic controlling three different chemi-ionization reactions, recent objective of our study, since they participate to the balance of phenomena occurring in plasma, interstellar medium, planetary atmospheres, flames and lasers. The optical potential, obtained by a phenomenological method and defined in the whole space of the relative configurations of reagents, has been formulated in an accurate and internally consistent way for three different systems. Some cuts of the multidimensional potential, that asymptotically correlate with a specific fine level of the open shell atom and/or with a defined orientation of the molecular reagent, have been exploited in the present study to emphasize crucial features of the collision dynamics along selected entrance channels of the reactions. Consistently, basic quantities determining the topology of the reaction stereo-dynamics have been properly defined, emphasizing in the three cases relevant changes in the microscopic reaction evolution. Much attention focused on the selectivity of the orbital angular momentum, affecting each collision event at any chosen collision energy. It controls the relative weight of two different reaction mechanisms. The direct reaction mechanism is driven by short-range chemical forces, promoting, by direct electron transfer between reagents, a prototypical elementary oxidation reaction. The indirect mechanism, controlled by the combination of long-range chemical and physical forces, can be triggered by a virtual photon exchanged between reagents, promoting a sort of photo-ionization process. Obtained results and emphasized differences appear to be of general interest for many other elementary processes, more difficult to characterize at this level of detail.
Graphic abstract
The behavior of nitrosyl chloride (ClNO) exposed to ionizing radiation was studied by direct probing valence-shell electrons in temporal coincidence with ions originating from the fragmentation process of the transient ClNO2+. Such a molecular dication was produced by double photoionization with synchrotron radiation in the 24–70 eV photon energy range. The experiment has been conducted at the Elettra Synchrotron Facility of Basovizza (Trieste, Italy) using a light beam linearly polarized with the direction of the polarization vector parallel to the ClNO molecular beam axis. ClNO molecules crossing the photon beam at right angles in the scattering region are generated by effusive expansion and randomly oriented. The threshold energy for the double ionization of ClNO (30.1 ± 0.1 eV) and six dissociation channels producing NO+/Cl+, N+/Cl+, N+/O+, O+/Cl+, ClN+/O+, NO+/Cl2+ ion pairs, with their relative abundance and threshold energies, have been measured.
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