62nd Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 54, Number 12
Tuesday–Friday, October 20–23, 2009;
Saratoga Springs, New York
Session BM: Kinetics Workshop: General Kinetic Models
10:00 AM–12:00 PM,
Monday, October 19, 2009
Saratoga Hilton
Room: Ballroom 1
Chair: Mirko Vukovic, Tokyo Electron America
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.GEC.BM.1
Abstract: BM.00001 : Kinetic Modeling of Complex Plasma Equipment
10:00 AM–10:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Vladimir Kolobov
(CFD Research Corporation)
Kinetics of electrons, ions and neutrals play an important role in
industrial plasma systems. These systems are often characterized
by complex
geometries and require 2D and 3D models of varying resolution for
realistic
simulations of relevant processes. We will describe hybrid
approach to
modeling such systems using kinetic models for electrons and
hydrodynamic
(fluid) models for ion and neutral components. Kinetic modeling
of electrons
involves numerical solution of the Boltzmann equation or its
derivatives.
Using two-term spherical harmonics expansion in velocity space,
the 6D
Boltzmann equation can be reduced to a 4D Fokker-Plank (F-P)
equation for
the Electron Energy Distribution Function (EEDF), which depends
of electron
energy and spatial position. This equation can be conveniently
solved using
total electron energy (kinetic + potential) for a wide range of
discharge
conditions. Further simplifications are possible in the two
extremes. At
high gas pressures one can solve local F-P equation for the EEDF
as a
function of local electric field and plasma composition, and
generate
Look-Up-Tables (LUTs) for electron transport coefficients and
rates of
electron induced chemical reactions to be used in fluid models for
electrons. The other extreme corresponds to a ``nonlocal
approach'' where the
EEDF depend solely on the total energy and does to depend
explicitly on
spatial position. We will describe the architecture of the F-P
solver for
electrons in the CFD-ACE+ software package and its application to
simulations of low-pressure ICP, CCP, and DC discharges, as well as
high-pressure micro-plasmas. The peculiarities of the EEDF
formation in
these systems, and the importance of nonlocal kinetic effects for
the
formation of striations, electron heating and macro-plasma
parameters will be discussed. We will also discuss the
limitations of the F-P approach and our current efforts to
develop a full Boltzmann solver for simulations of fast (runaway)
electrons and nonlocal electromagnetic phenomena in low-pressure
RF discharges.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.GEC.BM.1