DocumentCode :
3327877
Title :
Effect of plasma gases on OH radical generation in atmospheric pressure microwave plasma jet using UV cavity ring down spectroscopy
Author :
Srivastava, N. ; Chuji Wang
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys. & Astron., Mississippi State Univ., Starkville, MS, USA
fYear :
2010
fDate :
20-24 June 2010
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
1
Abstract :
Summary form only given. OH radical plays an important role in biomedical, material, and combustion processing as well as in many other applications. Quantification of OH radicals in atmospheric pressure microwave plasma jets can be useful for understanding of OH formation mechanism and plasma generation. As reported previously, OH radicals exist in the far downstream (distance / plasma column length > 3) of an atmospheric pressure argon plasma jet. So far, we have confirmed that the similar phenomenon also exits in helium plasma jets, N2 or O2 mixed with argon plasma jets, and N2 or O2 mixed with helium plasma jets. Here, the plasma column, which was generated using a microwave plasma source of 2.45 GHz, was typically of 3 mm long. Effects of addition of nitrogen and oxygen gases to argon in different mixing ratios, such as Ar: N2 = 56:1, Ar: N2 = 24:1, Ar: N2 = 13:1 and Ar: O2 = 27:1, were studied in detail using CRDS, OES and visual imaging. With addition of N2 in argon plasma, a plume tail appears in the plasma jet column while addition of O2 makes the plasma column unstable and more like a plume instead of a jet shape. Spectral simulations of emission spectra observed under various circumstances and temperature measurements clearly indicate that the gas temperature of Ar + N2 plasma is higher than that of Ar + O2 plasma. Absolute number densities of OH (v" = 0, J" = 3.5) along the plasma jet column were measured in these plasma jets. Dependence of absolute number density of OH on plasma power and gas flow-rate (variation in mixing ratios of N2 and O2) were also studied. The similar studies were carried out for addition of N2 and O2 in helium plasma jets with the mixing ratios of He: N2 = 44:1 and He: O2 = 41:1, respectively. As helium plasma jets are more stable, addition - f N2 or O2 changes the jets into an unstable jet and a plume-like plasma, respectively. The results suggest that the addition of N2 and O2 in argon and helium plasma jets is helpful for OH radical generation but also makes the plasmas less stable.
Keywords :
argon; gas mixtures; nitrogen; oxygen; oxygen compounds; plasma density; plasma diagnostics; plasma instability; plasma jets; plasma simulation; plasma sources; plasma temperature; CRDS; N2-Ar; O2-Ar; OES; OH; UV cavity; absolute number density; atmospheric pressure microwave plasma jet; biomedical processing; combustion processing; emission spectra simulation; frequency 2.45 GHz; gas flow-rate; material processing; microwave plasma source; mixing ratio; plasma column length; plasma gas effect; plasma generation; radical generation; ring down spectroscopy; size 3 mm; temperature measurement; unstable plasma jet; visual imaging; Argon; Atmospheric-pressure plasmas; Gases; Helium; Microwave generation; Plasma applications; Plasma measurements; Plasma simulation; Plasma temperature; Spectroscopy;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 2010 Abstracts IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Norfolk, VA
ISSN :
0730-9244
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5474-7
Electronic_ISBN :
0730-9244
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2010.5533928
Filename :
5533928
Link To Document :
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