Title :
Breakdown Delay Times for Subnanosecond Gas Discharges at Pressures Below One Atmosphere
Author :
Chaparro, Jordan E. ; Justis, William ; Krompholz, Hermann G. ; Hatfield, Lynn L. ; Neuber, Andreas A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Texas Tech Univ., Lubbock, TX
Abstract :
With a RADAN 303-A pulser (a rise time of 150 ps and a maximum voltage of 150 kV into matched load), fast breakdown in argon and air is investigated. An oil-filled coaxial transmission line is coupled with a lens to a biconical section and a radial millimeter-size gap operated at subatmospheric pressure. Diagnostics include capacitive voltage dividers which allow the determination of voltage across and current through the gap with a temporal resolution defined by the digitizer (20 Gs/s, 6 GHz) used. A scintillator-photomultiplier combination with different metal absorber foils and a temporal resolution of 2 ns is used as X-ray detector to obtain a rough energy spectrum of the X-rays and electrons in the range of 10-150 keV. Discharges are characterized by runaway electrons over much of the pressure range, with a strong excitation and ionization layer at the cathode surface, and ldquofree-fallrdquo conditions with negligible gaseous ionization for the rest of the gap. High-energy electrons (> 60 keV) are observed up to atmospheric pressure. Time-to-breakdown curves versus pressure have been measured for different applied voltage rise times. They resemble Paschen curves with a steep increase toward low pressure and a slow increase toward high pressure. The major experimental findings and particularly the time-to-breakdown curves are confirmed using simple force-equation modeling. Monte Carlo calculations simulating collisional ionizations and developing electron avalanches in three dimensions have been used to verify and explain the experimental results.
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; air; argon; discharges (electric); ionisation; plasma diagnostics; Ar; Monte Carlo calculations; Paschen curves; X-ray detector; biconical section; capacitive voltage dividers; cathode surface; collisional ionizations; electron avalanches; electron volt energy 10 keV to 150 keV; force-equation modeling; high-energy electrons; ionization layer; metal absorber foils; oil-filled coaxial transmission line; radial millimeter-size gap; runaway electrons; scintillator-photomultiplier combination; subatmospheric pressure; subnanosecond gas discharges; temporal resolution; Gas discharges; high overvoltages; runaway electrons; subnanosecond regime;
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPS.2008.2004365