Plasma decay in high-voltage nanosecond discharges in oxygen-containing mixtures


Cite item

Full Text

Open Access Open Access
Restricted Access Access granted
Restricted Access Subscription Access

Abstract

Plasma decay in high-voltage nanosecond discharges in CO2: O2 and Ar: O2 mixtures at room gas temperature and a pressure of 10 Torr is studied experimentally and theoretically. The time dependence of the electron density during plasma decay is measured using microwave interferometry. The time evolution of the charged particle density, ion composition, and electron temperature is simulated numerically. It is shown that, under the given conditions, the discharge plasma is dominated for the most time by O2+ ions and plasma decay is determined by dissociative and three-body electron−ion recombination. As in the previous studies performed for air and oxygen plasmas, agreement between measurements and calculations is achieved only under the assumption that the rate of three-body recombination of molecular ions is much greater than that for atomic ions. The values of the rate constant of three-body recombination of electrons with О2+ ions in a wide range of electron temperatures (500–5500 K), as well as for thermal (300 K) electrons, are obtained by processing the experimental results.

About the authors

E. M. Anokhin

Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology

Email: nick_aleksandrov@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Institutskii per. 9, Dolgoprudnyi, Moscow oblast, 141700

M. A. Popov

Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology

Email: nick_aleksandrov@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Institutskii per. 9, Dolgoprudnyi, Moscow oblast, 141700

I. V. Kochetov

Troitsk Institute for Innovation and Fusion Research

Email: nick_aleksandrov@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Troitsk, Moscow, 142190

N. L. Aleksandrov

Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology

Author for correspondence.
Email: nick_aleksandrov@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Institutskii per. 9, Dolgoprudnyi, Moscow oblast, 141700

A. Yu. Starikovskii

Princeton University

Email: nick_aleksandrov@mail.ru
United States, Princeton, NJ, 08544

Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
Action
1. JATS XML

Copyright (c) 2016 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.