62nd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 65, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 9–13, 2020;
Remote; Time Zone: Central Standard Time, USA
Session GI01: Invited: Low Temperature Plasma
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Tuesday, November 10, 2020
Chair: Michael Campanell, LLNL
Abstract: GI01.00004 : Laser Diagnostics for Nanosecond Pulse and Hybrid Plasmas: Electrical and Chemical Properties
11:00 AM–11:30 AM
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Abstract
Author:
Igor Adamovich
(Ohio State Univ - Columbus)
Applications of nonequilibrium plasmas to chemical syntheses, such as
plasma-assisted combustion, fuel reforming, and catalysis require efficient
generation of excited species and radicals. Self-sustained electric
discharges allow only a limited degree of control over the reduced electric
field (E/N) and therefore the range of species generated in the plasma. The
use of ``hybrid'' electric discharges, sustained by two independent voltage
waveforms, helps circumvent this constraint. Hybrid plasmas are sustained by
a combination of two overlapping discharges, (i) high peak voltage, high
repetition rate, ns pulse discharge producing electron impact ionization,
and (ii) sub-breakdown quasi-steady-state (DC or RF) discharge, which does
not generate ionization by itself but couples additional energy to the
pre-ionized flow. This approach improves the discharge stability, while
generation of desired excited species and radicals is optimized by combining
a high peak E/N ns pulse waveform with a ``tailored'' E/N value in the
quasi-steady-state discharge. In the present work, the plasma is sustained
by a ns pulse discharge train combined with a capacitively coupled RF
voltage waveform, which enables selective generation of vibrationally and
electronically excited molecules. The advantages of this method include the
use of a single pair of electrodes external to the plasma chemical reactor,
which provides better stability at high pressures and input powers, since
the RF discharge remains non-self-sustained in the entire gap. Electrical
and chemical properties of the plasma, such as the electric field
distribution, gas temperature, vibrational level populations of diatomic
molecules, and number densities of excited metastable electronic states are
measured using laser diagnostic techniques such as Electric Field Induced
Second Harmonic (EFISH) generation, Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering
(CARS), Cavity Ring Down Spectroscopy (CRDS), and Tunable Diode Laser
Absorption Spectroscopy (TDLAS). These data provide detailed insight into
kinetics of ionization, vibrational relaxation, quenching of excited
electronic states, molecular dissociation, and plasma chemical reactions.