1,633 research outputs found
Ionization by bulk heating of electrons in capacitive radio frequency atmospheric pressure microplasmas
Electron heating and ionization dynamics in capacitively coupled radio
frequency (RF) atmospheric pressure microplasmas operated in helium are
investigated by Particle in Cell simulations and semi-analytical modeling. A
strong heating of electrons and ionization in the plasma bulk due to high bulk
electric fields are observed at distinct times within the RF period. Based on
the model the electric field is identified to be a drift field caused by a low
electrical conductivity due to the high electron-neutral collision frequency at
atmospheric pressure. Thus, the ionization is mainly caused by ohmic heating in
this "Omega-mode". The phase of strongest bulk electric field and ionization is
affected by the driving voltage amplitude. At high amplitudes, the plasma
density is high, so that the sheath impedance is comparable to the bulk
resistance. Thus, voltage and current are about 45{\deg} out of phase and
maximum ionization is observed during sheath expansion with local maxima at the
sheath edges. At low driving voltages, the plasma density is low and the
discharge becomes more resistive resulting in a smaller phase shift of about
4{\deg}. Thus, maximum ionization occurs later within the RF period with a
maximum in the discharge center. Significant analogies to electronegative low
pressure macroscopic discharges operated in the Drift-Ambipolar mode are found,
where similar mechanisms induced by a high electronegativity instead of a high
collision frequency have been identified
Ionization wave propagation on a micro cavity plasma array
Microcavity plasma arrays of inverse pyramidal cavities have been fabricated
in p-Si wafers. Each cavity acts as a microscopic dielectric barrier discharge.
Operated at atmospheric pressure in argon and excited with high voltage at
about 10 kHz, each cavity develops a localized microplasma. Experiments have
shown a strong interaction of individual cavities, leading to the propagation
of wave-like optical emission structures along the surface of the array. This
phenomenon is numerically investigated using computer simulation. The observed
ionization wave propagates with a speed of about 5 km/s, which agrees well the
experimental findings. It is found that the wave propagation is due to
sequential contributions of a drift of electrons followed by drift of ions
between cavities seeded by photoemission of electrons by the plasma in adjacent
cavities
Silicon microcavity and microchannel plasma devices: spectroscopy and time-resolved optical experiments
Novel microcavity and microchannel plasma devices in Si have provided new and efficient sources of visible, ultraviolet (UV) and vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) radiation. The realization of this new platform for devices is implemented through VLSI and MEMS fabrication techniques. In this thesis, the basic physics of plasma discharges is presented, and the performance of Si microplasma devices with inverted pyramidal cavity and V-grooved channel configurations is described in some detail
The application of the scanning electron microscope to studies of current multiplication, avalanche breakdown and thermal runaway. Part 2 - General studies, mainly non-thermal
Scanning electron microscope applications in study of current multiplication, avalanche breakdown, and thermal runaway - Nonthermal effects in Read diode
Roles of Free Electrons and H2O2 in the Optical Breakdown-Induced Photochemical Reduction of Aqueous [AuCl4]-
Free electrons and H2O2 formed in an optical breakdown plasma are found to directly control the kinetics of [AuCl4]− reduction to form Au nanoparticles (AuNPs) during femtosecond laser-assisted synthesis of AuNPs. The formation rates of both free electrons and H2O2 strongly depend on the energy and duration of the 800 nm laser pulses over the ranges of 10−2400 μJ and 30−1500 fs. By monitoring the conversion of [AuCl4]− to AuNPs using in situ UV−vis spectroscopy during laser irradiation, the first- and second-order rate constants in the autocatalytic rate law, k1 and k2, were extracted and compared to the computed free electron densities and experimentally measured H2O2 formation rates. For laser pulse energies of 600 μJ and lower at all pulse durations, the first-order rate constant, k1, was found to be directly proportional to the theoretically calculated plasma volume, in which the electron density exceeds the threshold value of 1.8 × 1020 cm−3. The second-order rate constant, k2, was found to correlate with the measured H2O2 formation rate at all pulse energies and durations, resulting in the empirical relationship k2 ≈ H2O20.5. We have demonstrated that the relative composition of free electrons and H2O2 in the optical breakdown plasma may be controlled by changing the pulse energy and duration, which may make it possible to tune the size and dispersity of AuNPs and other metal nanoparticle products synthesized with femtosecond laser-based methods
Optical Limiting in Single-walled Carbon Nanotube Suspensions
Optical limiting behaviour of suspensions of single-walled carbon nanotubes
in water, ethanol and ethylene glycol is reported. Experiments with 532 nm, 15
nsec duration laser pulses show that optical limiting occurs mainly due to
nonlinear scattering. The observed host liquid dependence of optical limiting
in different suspensions suggests that the scattering originates from
microbubbles formed due to absorption-induced heating.Comment: 10 pages, 5 eps figures, to appear in Chem. Phys. Let
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