1 research outputs found
Electron dynamics in planar radio frequency magnetron plasmas: II. Heating and energization mechanisms studied via a 2d3v particle-in-cell/Monte Carlo code
The present work investigates electron transport and heating mechanisms using
an (r, z) particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation of a typical rf-driven axisymmetric
magnetron discharge with a conducting target. It is shown that for the
considered magnetic field topology the electron current flows through different
channels in the (r, z) plane: a ``transverse'' one, which involves current flow
through the electrons' magnetic confinement region (EMCR) above the racetrack,
and two ''longitudinal'' ones. Electrons gain energy from the electric field
along these channels following various mechanisms, which are rather distinct
from those sustaining dc-powered magnetrons. The longitudinal power absorption
involves mirror-effect heating (MEH), nonlinear electron resonance heating
(NERH), magnetized bounce heating (MBH), and the heating by the ambipolar field
at the sheath-presheath interface. The MEH and MBH represent two new mechanisms
missing from the previous literature. The MEH is caused by a reversed electric
field needed to overcome the mirror force generated in a nonuniform magnetic
field to ensure sufficient flux of electrons to the powered electrode, and the
MBH is related to a possibility for an electron to undergo multiple reflections
from the expanding sheath in the longitudinal channels connected by the
arc-like magnetic field. The electron heating in the transverse channel is
caused mostly by the essentially collisionless Hall heating in the EMCR above
the racetrack, generating a strong ExB azimuthal drift velocity. The latter
mechanism results in an efficient electron energization, i.e., energy transfer
from the electric field to electrons in the inelastic range. Since the main
electron population energized by this mechanism remains confined within the
discharge for a long time, its contribution to the ionization processes is
dominant