The dimension of the Clifford algebra $C_p$ generated by a vector space $V^p$ is given by $2^p$, where $p$ is the dimension of the vector space (T. Frankel, the geometry of physics). Based on the top-rated answer to this post Dimension of Dirac $\gamma$ matrices, it seems that the vector space that generates this Clifford algebra has dimension $p=[d/2]$, where $d$ is the general spacetime dimension and $[\cdot]$ takes the integer part. Also it is shown that the irreducible representation of the $C_p$ has dimension $2^p=2^{[d/2]}$.
First of all, it seems that the dimension of the Clifford algebra $C_p$ in Frankel's book is the same with the dimension of its irreducible representation. This makes sense to me, but I would like to confirm whether this is true or not.
Secondly, as mentioned above, there is a mysterious relation between spacetime dimension $d$ and the dimension of the vector space $p$ given by $p=[d/2]$. The reason that I ask about this is we need proper $\gamma$ matrices to write down a theory for spinor fields and the aforementioned relation is crucial for doing this when the theory lives in spacetime with generic dimension $d$. I would like know why the spacetime dimension is related to the dimension of the vector space used to generate the Clifford algebra in this way.
Thirdly, I will take $d=1+1$ for this part, for simplicity. In this simple case, the irreducible rep has dimension $2^1=2$, i.e. we can just use Pauli matrices here. However, nothing can stop us from using the $4\times 4$, or any integer multiple of 2, reducible rep, i.e. we will have 4-component spinors. Then my questions is based on the underlying physics, how to decide which representation to use? People may think that different rep will give the same physics, but here is a paper https://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevD.33.3704 that actually treated them differently.