Title :
Room temperature direct current air plasma jet for biomedical applications
Author :
Wu, Shiqian ; Wang, Zhen ; Huang, Qin ; Lu, Xinyi ; Ostrikov, K.
Author_Institution :
State key Lab. of Adv. Electromagn. Eng. & Technol., Huazhong Univ. of Sci. & Technol., Wuhan, China
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Atmospheric-pressure room-temperature plasma jets are commonly used in plasma medicine, nanotechnology, as well as surface and materials processing. Most of the applications require room-temperature operation while completely avoiding the glow-to-arc transitions. To meet these requirements, the atmospheric plasma jets are usually sustained in noble gases. However, this is very challenging for the open-air operation. Moreover, the cross-sections of the plasma plumes are typically very small, which make large-area surface processing particularly difficult. One promising way to overcome this shortcoming is by using the plasma jet arrays. However, since the individual plasma plumes generated by the arrayed plasma jets are in most cases independent and do not merge in open air, it is very difficult to achieve uniform plasmas and surface treatment effects. In this paper, we demonstrate a homogenous cold air plasma glow with a large cross-section generated by a direct current power supply. There is no risk of glow-to-arc transitions, and the plasma glow appears uniform regardless of the gap between the nozzle and the surface being processed. Detailed studies show that both the position of the quartz tube and the gas flow rate affect the plasma characteristics. Further investigation indicates that the residual charges trapped on the inner surface of the quartz tube may be responsible for the generation of the air plasma plume with a large cross-section. Moreover, the spatially resolved optical emission spectroscopy reveals that the air plasma plume is uniform as it propagates out of the nozzle. The air plasma plume with remarkable improvement of the plasma uniformity is used to improve the bio-compatibility of a glass coverslip over a reasonably large area. This improvement is demonstrated by a much more uniform and effective attachment and proliferation of human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK 293) cells on the plasma-treated surface.
Keywords :
biomedical materials; cellular biophysics; electric current; kidney; plasma applications; plasma jets; plasma pressure; plasma temperature; surface treatment; HEK 293 cell; air plasma plume generation; air plasma plume propagation; atmospheric plasma jet; atmospheric pressure room temperature plasma jet; biomedical application; cell proliferation; direct current power supply; effective cell attachment; gas flow rate effect; glass coverslip biocompatibility improvement; glow-to-arc transition; homogenous cold air plasma glow; human embryonic kidney 293 cell; large cross-section plasma glow; large-area surface processing; materials processing; nanotechnology; noble gas; nozzle-surface gap; open-air operation; plasma characteristics; plasma jet array; plasma medicine; plasma plume cross-section; plasma uniformity; plasma-treated surface; quartz tube position effect; quartz tube residual charge effect; room temperature direct current air plasma jet; room-temperature operation; spatially resolved optical emission spectroscopy; temperature 293 K to 298 K; uniform air plasma plume; uniform cell attachment; uniform plasma glow; uniform surface treatment effect; Australia; Educational institutions; Electron tubes; Laboratories; Plasma temperature; Surface treatment;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science (ICOPS), 2013 Abstracts IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2013.6633324