70th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 62, Number 10
Monday–Friday, November 6–10, 2017;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session JW2: Diagnostics II
8:00 AM–9:30 AM,
Wednesday, November 8, 2017
Room: Duquesne
Chair: Terry Sheridan, Ohio Northern University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2017.GEC.JW2.5
Abstract: JW2.00005 : Single Emission-Line-Ratio Techniques for Correlating Reduced Electric Field, Electron Energy Distribution, and Metastable-Atom Density in a Pulsed Argon Discharge
9:00 AM–9:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Jim Franek
(West Virginia University)
Argon emission lines, particularly those in the near-infrared region
(700-900nm), are used to determine plasma properties in low-temperature,
partially ionized plasmas to determine effective electron temperature and
argon excited state density using appropriately assumed electron energy
distributions. While the effect of radiation trapping is included in the
interpretation of plasma properties from emission-line ratio analysis,
eliminating the need to account for these effects by directly observing the
3px-to-1sy transitions is preferable in most cases as this simplifies the
analysis.
The extended coronal model is used to acquire an expression for
420.1-419.8nm emission-line ratio, which is sensitive to direct
electron-impact excitation of argon excited states as well as stepwise
electron-impact excitation of argon excited states for the purpose of
inferring plasma quantities from experimental measurements. Initial
inspection of the 420.1-419.8nm emission-line ratio suggests the pulse may
be empirically divided into three distinct stages. Using equilibrium
electron energy distributions from simulation to deduce excitation rates in
the extended coronal model affords agreement between predicted and observed
metastable density.
Applying this diagnostic technique to lower-resolution spectroscopic systems
is not straightforward, however, as the 419.8nm and 420.1nm emission-line
profiles are convolved and become insufficiently resolved for treating the
convolution as two separate emission-lines. To remedy this, the argon
425.9nm emission-line is evaluated as a proxy for the 419.8nm emission-line
as they are both attributed to direct excitation from the argon ground
state. The intensity of the 425.9nm emission-line is compared to the
intensity of the 419.8nm emission-line over a range of plasma conditions to
infer the same plasma quantities from similar experimental measurements.
Discrepancies between the observed intensities of the emission-lines are
explained by electron-impact cross-sections of their parent states and the
electron energy distribution.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2017.GEC.JW2.5