From Submicrosecond- to Nanosecond-Pulsed Atmospheric-Pressure Plasmas
- Resource Type
- Periodical
- Authors
- Iza, F.; Walsh, J. L.; Kong, M. G.
- Source
- IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on. 37(7):1289-1296 Jul, 2009
- Subject
- Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Atmospheric-pressure plasmas
Electrons
Atmospheric modeling
Computational modeling
Voltage
Plasma chemistry
Ignition
Pulse shaping methods
Plasma applications
Partial discharges
Atmospheric pressure
nanosecond
pulsed plasma
simulation
- Language
- ISSN
- 0093-3813
1939-9375
We have developed a time-hybrid computational model to study pulsed atmospheric-pressure discharges and compared simulation results with experimental data. Experimental and computational results indicate that increasing the applied voltage results in faster ignition of the discharge and an increase in the mean electron energy, opening the door to tunable plasma chemistry by means of pulse shaping. Above a critical electric field of $\sim$2 kV/mm for $\sim$ 1-mm discharges, pulsed plasmas ignite right after the application of an externally applied voltage pulse. Despite the large $pd$ value (30–300 $\hbox{torr} \cdot \hbox{cm}$) and the high applied electric field, the discharges are found to be streamer free in a desirable glowlike mode. The comparison of the time evolution of the mean electron kinetic energy as a function of the pulse rise time suggests that a fast rise time is not necessarily the best way of achieving high mean electron energy.