Title :
Time-dependent one-dimensional modeling of pulsed plasma discharge in a capillary plasma device
Author_Institution :
Nanotechnologies Inc., Austin, TX, USA
Abstract :
The capillary plasma device is a relatively new technology for producing plasma vapor after ablating the capillary bore wall using high-magnitude pulsed electric power. Time-dependent behavior of the plasma flow in the capillary plasma device is investigated numerically by solving the radially averaged one-dimensional inviscid conservative equations of gas dynamics using LCPFCT gas dynamics code, which utilizes flux corrected transport (FCT) in solving generalized continuity equations. Joule heating and the mass ablation from the bore wall are incorporated in the numerical modeling. The thermodynamic and transport properties of the plasma are evaluated based on the assumption of local thermodynamic equilibrium and weakly nonideal plasma. At the bore exit, the sonic boundary condition is applied due to the thermally choked flow. The computational results yield the details of the plasma discharge behavior in the capillary bore including high-pressure and high-temperature plasma conditions at the bore exit. The plasma composition at the bore exit shows the significant ionization of the polycarbonate atomic species to the first ionization level, but the second ionization is found to be negligible. Computed mass ablation from the bore wall agrees well with the experimentally determined mass loss, but the assumption of blackbody radiation from the bulk plasma yields the overprediction in mass ablation.
Keywords :
capillarity; discharges (electric); plasma simulation; plasma thermodynamics; plasma-wall interactions; Joule heating; ablation; blackbody radiation; bore exit; bulk plasma; capillary bore; capillary bore wall; capillary plasma device; continuity equations; first ionization level; flux corrected transport; gas dynamics; gas dynamics code; high-magnitude pulsed electric power; high-pressure plasma conditions; high-temperature plasma conditions; ionization; local thermodynamic equilibrium; mass ablation; mass loss; numerical modeling; plasma composition; plasma discharge; plasma flow; plasma simulation; plasma transport properties; plasma vapor; polycarbonate; pulsed plasma discharge; radially averaged one-dimensional inviscid conservative equations; sonic boundary condition; thermally choked flow; thermodynamic properties; time-dependent behavior; time-dependent one-dimensional modeling; time-dependent simulation; transport properties; weakly nonideal plasma; Boring; Boundary conditions; Equations; Heating; Ionization; Numerical models; Plasma devices; Plasma properties; Plasma transport processes; Thermodynamics;
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPS.2003.815472