Title :
Pulsed discahrge plasma generated by nano-seconds pulsed power in atmospheric air
Author :
Wang, D. ; Namihira, T. ; Akiyama, H.
Author_Institution :
Priority Organ. for Innovation & Excellence, Kumamoto Univ., Kumamoto, Japan
fDate :
June 28 2009-July 2 2009
Abstract :
Non-thermal plasma has been widely used for various applications. The observation of discharge plasmas is an essential aspect for understanding the plasma physics of this growing field. In this work, the propagation of pulsed discharges was observed by both framing and streak images and spectroscopy. The results showed two discharge phases exist in pulsed discharge with 100 ns in pulse width; streamer and glow-like phase. Between those two phases, the electrode impedance changed dramatically which causes impedance mismatching between the power source and electrode. In addition, the gas temperature increased about 150 K during the glow-like discharge, which causes further energy loss in plasma processing. Consequently, the decision became to remove the glow-like phase and only having the streamer discharge. A nano-seconds pulsed power generator was developed and the observed discharge plasma has the streamer phase only. Furthermore, its application of ozone generation showed highest energy efficiency than other discharge methods.
Keywords :
discharges (electric); plasma applications; plasma diagnostics; plasma sources; pulsed power technology; atmospheric pressure plasma; glow-like discharge phase; nanosecond pulsed power generator; nonthermal plasma; ozone generation; plasma application; power source-electrode impedance mismatch; pulsed discharge plasma; pulsed discharge propagation; spectroscopy; streak images; streamer discharge phase; time 100 ns; Electrodes; Fault location; Impedance; Plasma applications; Plasma materials processing; Plasma sources; Plasma temperature; Power generation; Pulse generation; Space vector pulse width modulation;
Conference_Titel :
Pulsed Power Conference, 2009. PPC '09. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Washington, DC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4064-1
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4065-8
DOI :
10.1109/PPC.2009.5386122