• DocumentCode
    112749
  • Title

    Characterization of a Cold Atmospheric Pressure Plasma Jet Device Driven by Nanosecond Voltage Pulses

  • Author

    Boselli, Marco ; Colombo, Vittorio ; Gherardi, Matteo ; Laurita, Romolo ; Liguori, Anna ; Sanibondi, Paolo ; Simoncelli, Emanuele ; Stancampiano, Augusto

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Ind. Eng. & Ind. Res. Centre for Adv. Mech. & Mater., Alma Mater Studiorum-Univ. di Bologna, Bologna, Italy
  • Volume
    43
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Mar-15
  • Firstpage
    713
  • Lastpage
    725
  • Abstract
    The structure, fluid-dynamic behavior, temperature, and radiation emission of a cold atmospheric pressure plasma jet driven by high-voltage pulses with rise time and duration of a few nanoseconds have been investigated. Intensified charge-coupled device (iCCD) imaging revealed that the discharge starts when voltage values of 5-10 kV are reached on the rising front of the applied voltage pulse; the discharge then propagates downstream the source outlet with a velocity around 107-108 cm/s. Light emission was observed to increase and decrease periodically and repetitively during discharge propagation. The structure of the plasma plume presents a single front or either several branched subfronts, depending on the operating conditions; merging results of investigations by means of Schlieren and iCCD imaging suggests that branching of the discharge front occurs in spatial regions where the flow is turbulent. By means of optical emission spectroscopy, discharge emission was observed in the ultraviolet-visible (UV-VIS) spectral range (N2, N2+ , OH, and NO emission bands); total UV irradiance was lower than 1 μW/cm2 even at short distances from the device outlet (<;15 mm). Plasma plume temperature does not exceed 45 °C for all the tested operating conditions and values close to ambient temperature were measured around 10 mm downstream the source outlet.
  • Keywords
    CCD image sensors; discharges (electric); plasma devices; plasma diagnostics; plasma jets; plasma sources; plasma temperature; plasma turbulence; schlieren systems; Schlieren imaging; UV-VIS; ambient temperature; applied voltage pulse; branched subfronts; cold atmospheric pressure plasma jet device; device outlet; discharge emission; discharge front branching; discharge propagation; fluid-dynamic behavior; high-voltage pulses; iCCD imaging; intensified charge-coupled device imaging; light emission; nanosecond voltage pulses; operating condition; optical emission spectroscopy; plasma plume structure; plasma plume temperature; pressure 1 atm; radiation emission; rise time; rising front; source outlet; spatial region; total UV irradiance; turbulent flow; ultraviolet-visible spectral range; velocity 107 cm/s to 108 cm/s; voltage 5 kV to 10 kV; Fault location; Imaging; Integrated optics; Plasma sources; Temperature measurement; Cold atmospheric pressure plasma jets (APPJs); material and biomedical applications; material and biomedical applications.; plasma diagnostics;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0093-3813
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TPS.2014.2381854
  • Filename
    7001104