Title :
Particle-in-cell modeling of potential gradients in expanding helicon plasmas using XOOPIC
Author :
Wiebold, Matt ; Lynn, Zach
Author_Institution :
Carleton Coll., Northfield, MN, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. The particle-in-cell (PIC) code XOOPIC is used to model expanding, low-density (ne~109-1010 cm-3, Te~5-10 eV) argon plasmas in an effort to further understand the formation of potential gradients in the region of expansion. There is experimental evidence that a self-bias voltage forms between the plasma in the grounded expansion chamber and that in the insulating source region in the Madison helicon experiment. In this experiment, low-density argon plasma is created in a system typically used to create helicon discharges. The RF antenna capacitively couples to the low-density plasma, which results in large-amplitude plasma potential fluctuations at the RF frequency (13.56 MHz). These fluctuations lead to an increased initial flux of electrons from the source region to the expansion region, resulting in the measured self-bias voltage and corresponding gradient in time-averaged plasma potential between the upstream and downstream chambers. Plasma ions are then accelerated by this gradient. This phenomenon is being modeled in XOOPIC in an effort to better understand the evolution of the plasma potential and electron energy distribution (EEDF).
Keywords :
argon; helicons; plasma fluctuations; plasma simulation; plasma sources; Ar; Madison helicon; expanding helicon plasmas; expanding low-density argon plasmas; expansion region; frequency 13.56 MHz; grounded expansion chamber; insulating source region; particle-in-cell code XOOPIC; particle-in-cell modeling; potential gradient formation; self-bias voltage; Argon; Educational institutions; Electric potential; Fluctuations; Plasmas; Radio frequency; Voltage measurement;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science (ICOPS), 2013 Abstracts IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2013.6633363