64th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 56, Number 15
Monday–Friday, November 14–18, 2011;
Salt Lake City, Utah
Session CT1: High Pressure Discharges I
8:00 AM–9:00 AM,
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Room: 255D
Chair: Deborah O'Connell, Univerity of York
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.GEC.CT1.2
Abstract: CT1.00002 : Nanosecond Pulse Discharges and Fast Ionization Wave Discharges: Fundamental Kinetic Processes and Applications
8:30 AM–9:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Igor Adamovich
(The Ohio State University)
Over the last two decades, nanosecond pulse discharges and Fast Ionization
Wave (FIW) discharges have been studied extensively, both theoretically and
experimentally. Current interest in characterization of these discharges is
driven mainly by their potential for applications such as plasma chemical
fuel reforming, plasma-assisted combustion, high-speed flow control, pumping
of electric discharge excited lasers, and generation of high-energy
electrons. A unique capability of FIW discharges to generate significant
ionization and high concentrations of excited species at high pressures and
over large distances, before ionization instabilities have time to develop,
is very attractive for these applications. Recent advances in laser optical
diagnostics offer an opportunity of making non-intrusive, spatially and
time-resolved measurements of electron density and electric field
distributions in high-speed ionization wave discharges, on nanosecond time
scale. Insight into FIW formation and propagation dynamics also requires
development of predictive kinetic models, and their experimental validation.
Although numerical kinetic models may incorporate detailed kinetics of
charged and neutral species in the propagating ionization wave front
(including non-local electron kinetics), analytic models are also attractive
due to their capability of elucidating fundamental trends of discharge
development. The talk gives an overview of recent progress in experimental
characterization and kinetic modeling of nanosecond pulse and fast
ionization wave discharges in nitrogen and air over a wide range of pulse
repetition rates, 0.1-40 kHz. FIW discharge plasmas sustained at high pulse
repetition rates are diffuse and volume filling, with most of the power
coupled to the plasma behind the wave, at E/N=200-300 Td and energy loading
of 1-2 meV/molecule/pulse. The results demonstrate significant potential of
large volume, diffuse, high pulse repetition rate FIW discharges for novel
plasma chemical applications.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.GEC.CT1.2