62nd Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 54, Number 12
Tuesday–Friday, October 20–23, 2009;
Saratoga Springs, New York
Session HT3: Optical Diagnostics I
1:30 PM–3:30 PM,
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Saratoga Hilton
Room: Ballroom 3
Chair: Marc Schaepkens, Momentive Performance Materials
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.GEC.HT3.1
Abstract: HT3.00001 : Laser Thomson scattering diagnostics of low-temperature plasmas
1:30 PM–2:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Akihiro Kono
(Nagoya University)
Laser Thomson scattering (LTS) is the light scattering by free
electrons and
one can derive electron density and energy distribution from the
intensity
and profile of a light scattering spectrum. To apply LTS
technique to
diagnostics of low-temperature plasmas, one needs to detect
narrow ($\sim $a
few nm) and extremely weak light scattering spectra against
orders-of-magnitude stronger background stray scattering. This
difficulty
has been overcome by the development of a triple grating
spectrograph [1],
which produces a light scattering spectrum on its output focal
plane with
the stray component highly suppressed (10$^{-6})$ with the aid of an
internal spatial filter. Imaging detection of the spectrum with a
gated ICCD
camera with photon-counting-level sensitivity enables one to
carry out
measurements within a reasonable time. The technique has been
applied to a
number of cases where a conventional Langmuir probe method is
difficult to
use, including measurements of EEDF near the plasma-dielectric
interface in
a surface wave plasma (where strong microwave field interferes
with the
probe), high spatial resolution measurements for atmospheric
pressure
microdischarge, etc. Other applications of the LTS measurement
system could
be negative ion density measurements (with the aid of laser
photodetachment
effect) and Raman scattering measurements, giving local gas
temperature and
local gas species concentration. To make reliable LTS
measurements, one
should be careful about electron production due to multiphoton
ionization
caused by strong laser field in the focal region. Direct
measurements of
multiphoton ionization yields for various gas species indicate that
metastable rare-gas atoms are ionized with a high probability and
even
ground-state atoms and molecules are ionized with a probability
exceeding
the ionization degree of the plasma under study, depending on the
gas
species, plasma conditions, and laser focusing conditions, which
should be
controlled to minimize the laser perturbation.\\[4pt]
[1] Kono and Nakatani, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 71 (2000) 2716.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.GEC.HT3.1