DocumentCode :
1806734
Title :
Ionized plasmas in air
Author :
Shneider, M.N. ; Macheret, S.O. ; Miles, R.B.
Author_Institution :
Princeton Univ., NJ, USA
fYear :
2001
fDate :
17-22 June 2001
Firstpage :
466
Abstract :
Summary form only given, as follows. High-energy electron beams can create nonequilibrium plasmas with power budget 2-3 orders of magnitude lower than that of electric field-sustained discharges. We analyze kinetics and dynamics of plasmas generated in dense gases by beams of keV-class electrons with beam current density on the order of 1-10 mA/cm/sup 2/. Of specific interest is the case when the beam relaxation length is considerably less than the distance to the anode or other conducting objects. The paper focuses on a "fountain" regime where the space charge of the beam is removed by the back current of plasma electrons towards the injection foil. 1D modeling couples electron beam propagation, electrodynamics, charge particle kinetics, and kinetics of chemical species and molecular excited states. Kinetics of high-energy electrons is described in the \´forward-back\´ approximation developed by us earlier, while the drift-diffusion approximation is used for low-energy electrons. Temporal and spatial evolution of electron and ion densities, electric field, electron energy distribution function, and densities of chemical species and molecular excited states are computed. In the regime when attachment to oxygen is largely balanced by detachment processes, electric field in the plasma is found to be very low, so that electron temperature of plasma electrons is only about 0.1 eV or lower. Because of that, vibrational excitation is much weaker than in conventional nonequilibrium discharges where electron temperature is about 1-3 eV. The low electron temperature also results in excitation and dissociation processes being driven by beam electrons, with virtually no role of plasma electrons. The results of calculations are compared with recent experimental results obtained in the laboratory, and a good agreement is found.
Keywords :
air; current density; electron beams; electron density; plasma collision processes; plasma density; plasma kinetic theory; plasma production; plasma temperature; plasma transport processes; plasma-beam interactions; space charge; 1D modeling; air; anode; back current; beam current density; beam electrons; beam relaxation length; charge particle kinetics; chemical species; conducting objects; dense gases; densities; detachment processes; dissociation processes; drift-diffusion approximation; dynamics; electric field; electric field-sustained discharges; electrodynamics; electron beam propagation; electron densities; electron energy distribution function; electron temperature; excitation processes; forward-back approximation; fountain regime; high-energy electron beam; high-energy electrons; injection foil; ion densities; ionized plasmas; keV-class electrons; kinetics; laboratory; low electron temperature; low-energy electrons; molecular excited states; nonequilibrium discharges; nonequilibrium plasmas; plasma electrons; power budget; space charge; spatial evolution; temporal evolution; vibrational excitation; Anodes; Chemicals; Current density; Electron beams; Gases; Kinetic theory; Particle beams; Plasma chemistry; Plasma density; Plasma temperature;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Pulsed Power Plasma Science, 2001. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts
Conference_Location :
Las Vegas, NV, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7141-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PPPS.2001.961238
Filename :
961238
Link To Document :
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