398 research outputs found
Streamers, sprites, leaders, lightning: from micro- to macroscales
"Streamers, sprites, leaders, lightning: from micro- to macroscales" was the
theme of a workshop in October 2007 in Leiden, The Netherlands; it brought
researchers from plasma physics, electrical engineering and industry,
geophysics and space physics, computational science and nonlinear dynamics
together around the common topic of generation, structure and products of
streamer-like electric breakdown. The present cluster issue collects relevant
articles within this area; most of them were presented during the workshop. We
here briefly discuss the research questions and very shortly review the papers
in the cluster issue, and we also refer to a few recent papers in other
journals.Comment: Editorial introduction for the cluster issue on "Streamers, sprites
and lightning" in J. Phys. D, 13 pages, 74 reference
The physics of streamer discharge phenomena
In this review we describe a transient type of gas discharge which is
commonly called a streamer discharge, as well as a few related phenomena in
pulsed discharges. Streamers are propagating ionization fronts with
self-organized field enhancement at their tips that can appear in gases at (or
close to) atmospheric pressure. They are the precursors of other discharges
like sparks and lightning, but they also occur in for example corona reactors
or plasma jets which are used for a variety of plasma chemical purposes. When
enough space is available, streamers can also form at much lower pressures,
like in the case of sprite discharges high up in the atmosphere.
We explain the structure and basic underlying physics of streamer discharges,
and how they scale with gas density. We discuss the chemistry and applications
of streamers, and describe their two main stages in detail: inception and
propagation. We also look at some other topics, like interaction with flow and
heat, related pulsed discharges, and electron runaway and high energy
radiation. Finally, we discuss streamer simulations and diagnostics in quite
some detail.
This review is written with two purposes in mind: First, we describe recent
results on the physics of streamer discharges, with a focus on the work
performed in our groups. We also describe recent developments in diagnostics
and simulations of streamers. Second, we provide background information on the
above-mentioned aspects of streamers. This review can therefore be used as a
tutorial by researchers starting to work in the field of streamer physics.Comment: 89 pages, 29 figure
Probing background ionization: Positive streamers with varying pulse repetition rate and with a radioactive admixture
Positive streamers need a source of free electrons ahead of them to
propagate. A streamer can supply these electrons by itself through
photo-ionization, or the electrons can be present due to external background
ionization. Here we investigate the effects of background ionization on
streamer propagation and morphology by changing the gas composition and the
repetition rate of the voltage pulses, and by adding a small amount of
radioactive Krypton 85.
We find that the general morphology of a positive streamer discharge in high
purity nitrogen depends on background ionization: at lower background
ionization levels the streamers branch more and have a more feather-like
appearance. This is observed both when varying the repetition rate and when
adding Krypton 85, though side branches are longer with the radioactive
admixture. But velocities and minimal diameters of streamers are virtually
independent of the background ionization level. In air, the inception cloud
breaks up into streamers at a smaller radius when the repetition rate and
therefore the background ionization level is higher. When measuring the effects
of the pulse repetition rate and of the radioactive admixture on the discharge
morphology, we found that our estimates of background ionization levels are
consistent with these observations; this gives confidence in the estimates.
Streamer channels generally do not follow the paths of previous discharge
channels for repetition rates of up to 10 Hz. We estimate the effect of
recombination and diffusion of ions and free electrons from the previous
discharge and conclude that the old trail has largely disappeared at the moment
of the next voltage pulse; therefore the next streamers indeed cannot follow
the old trail.Comment: 30 pages, 13 figure
A time scale for electrical screening in pulsed gas discharges
The Maxwell time is a typical time scale for the screening of an electric
field in a medium with a given conductivity. We introduce a generalization of
the Maxwell time that is valid for gas discharges: the \emph{ionization
screening time}, that takes the growth of the conductivity due to impact
ionization into account. We present an analytic estimate for this time scale,
assuming a planar geometry, and evaluate its accuracy by comparing with
numerical simulations in 1D and 3D. We investigate the minimum plasma density
required to prevent the growth of streamers with local field enhancement, and
we discuss the effects of photoionization and electron detachment on ionization
screening. Our results can help to understand the development of pulsed
discharges, for example nanosecond pulsed discharges at atmospheric pressure or
halo discharges in the lower ionosphere
Spatially hybrid computations for streamer discharges with generic features of pulled fronts: I. Planar fronts
Streamers are the first stage of sparks and lightning; they grow due to a
strongly enhanced electric field at their tips; this field is created by a thin
curved space charge layer. These multiple scales are already challenging when
the electrons are approximated by densities. However, electron density
fluctuations in the leading edge of the front and non-thermal stretched tails
of the electron energy distribution (as a cause of X-ray emissions) require a
particle model to follow the electron motion. As super-particle methods create
wrong statistics and numerical artifacts, modeling the individual electron
dynamics in streamers is limited to early stages where the total electron
number still is limited.
The method of choice is a hybrid computation in space where individual
electrons are followed in the region of high electric field and low density
while the bulk of the electrons is approximated by densities (or fluids). We
here develop the hybrid coupling for planar fronts. First, to obtain a
consistent flux at the interface between particle and fluid model in the hybrid
computation, the widely used classical fluid model is replaced by an extended
fluid model. Then the coupling algorithm and the numerical implementation of
the spatially hybrid model are presented in detail, in particular, the position
of the model interface and the construction of the buffer region. The method
carries generic features of pulled fronts that can be applied to similar
problems like large deviations in the leading edge of population fronts etc.Comment: 33 pages, 15 figures and 2 table
The emission of energetic electrons from the complex streamer corona adjacent to leader stepping
We here propose a model to capture the complexity of the streamer corona
adjacent to leader stepping and relate it to the production of energetic
electrons serving as a source of X-rays and -rays, manifesting in
terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs). During its stepping, the leader tip is
accompanied by a corona consisting of multitudinous streamers perturbing the
air in its vicinity and leaving residual charge behind. We explore the relative
importance of air perturbations and preionization on the production of
energetic run-away electrons by 2.5D cylindrical Monte Carlo particle
simulations of streamers in ambient fields of 16 kV cm and 50 kV
cm at ground pressure. We explore preionization levels between
m and m, channel widths between 0.5 and 1.5 times the
original streamer widths and air perturbation levels between 0\% and 50\% of
ambient air. We observe that streamers in preionized and perturbed air
accelerate more efficiently than in non-ionized and uniform air with air
perturbation dominating the streamer acceleration. We find that in unperturbed
air preionization levels of m are sufficient to explain
run-away electron rates measured in conjunction with terrestrial gamma-ray
flashes. In perturbed air, the production rate of runaway electrons varies from
s to s with maximum electron energies from
some hundreds of eV up to some hundreds of keV in fields above and below the
breakdown strength. In the presented simulations the number of runaway
electrons matches with the number of energetic electrons measured in alignment
with the observations of terrestrial gamma-ray flashes. Conclusively, the
complexity of the streamer zone ahead of leader tips allows explaining the
emission of energetic electrons and photons from streamer discharges.Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures, 2 table
Lagrangian study of transport and mixing in a mesoscale eddy street
We use dynamical systems approach and Lagrangian tools to study surface
transport and mixing of water masses in a selected coastal region of the Japan
Sea with moving mesoscale eddies associated with the Primorskoye Current.
Lagrangian trajectories are computed for a large number of particles in an
interpolated velocity field generated by a numerical regional multi-layer
eddy-resolving circulation model. We compute finite-time Lyapunov exponents for
a comparatively long period of time by the method developed and plot the
Lyapunov synoptic map quantifying surface transport and mixing in that region.
This map uncovers the striking flow structures along the coast with a mesoscale
eddy street and repelling material lines. We propose new Lagrangian diagnostic
tools --- the time of exit of particles off a selected box, the number of
changes of the sign of zonal and meridional velocities --- to study transport
and mixing by a pair of strongly interacting eddies often visible at
sea-surface temperature satellite images in that region. We develop a technique
to track evolution of clusters of particles, streaklines and material lines.
The Lagrangian tools used allow us to reveal mesoscale eddies and their
structure, to track different phases of the coastal flow, to find inhomogeneous
character of transport and mixing on mesoscales and submesoscales and to
quantify mixing by the values of exit times and the number of times particles
wind around the eddy's center
Development of filtered Euler–Euler two-phase model for circulating fluidised bed: High resolution simulation, formulation and a priori analyses
Euler–Euler two-phase model simulations are usually performed with mesh sizes larger than the smallscale structure size of gas–solid flows in industrial fluidised beds because of computational resource limitation. Thus, these simulations do not fully account for the particle segregation effect at the small scale and this causes poor prediction of bed hydrodynamics. An appropriate modelling approach accounting for the influence of unresolved structures needs to be proposed for practical simulations. For this purpose, computational grids are refined to a cell size of a few particle diameters to obtain mesh-independent results requiring up to 17 million cells in a 3D periodic circulating fluidised bed. These mesh-independent results are filtered by volume averaging and used to perform a priori analyses on the filtered phase balance equations. Results show that filtered momentum equations can be used for practical simulations but must take account of a drift velocity due to the sub-grid correlation between the local fluid velocity and the local particle volume fraction, and particle sub-grid stresses due to the filtering of the non-linear convection term. This paper proposes models for sub-grid drift velocity and particle sub-grid stresses and assesses these models by a priori tests
Review of recent results on streamer discharges and discussion of their relevance for sprites and lightning
It is by now well understood that large sprite discharges at the low air
densities of the mesosphere are physically similar to small streamer discharges
in air at standard temperature and pressure. This similarity is based on
Townsend scaling with air density. First the theoretical basis of Townsend
scaling and a list of six possible corrections to scaling are discussed; then
the experimental evidence for the similarity between streamers and sprites is
reviewed. We then discuss how far present sprite and streamer theory has been
developed, and we show how streamer experiments can be interpreted as sprite
simulations. We review those results of recent streamer research that are
relevant for sprites and other forms of atmospheric electricity and discuss
their implications for sprite understanding. These include the large range of
streamer diameters and velocities and the overall 3D morphology with branching,
interaction and reconnection, the dependence on voltage and polarity, the
electron energies in the streamer head and the consecutive chemical efficiency
and hard radiation. New theoretical and experimental results concern
measurements of streamer spectra in air, the density dependence of streamer
heating (hot leaders are unlikely at 80 km altitude and cold streamers are
unlikely in liquids), and a discussion of the influence of magnetic fields on
thermal electrons or on energetic electrons in streamers or sprites.Comment: 38 pages, 4 figures, article accepted for publication in J. Geophys.
Res. - Space Physic
- …
