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Vol 44, No 4 (2018)

Tokamaks

Analysis of Dynamics of Plasma Current Quench in the Globus-M Spherical Tokamak

Sakharov N.V., Gusev V.K., Kavin A.A., Kamenshchikov S.N., Lobanov K.M., Mineev A.B., Patrov M.I., Petrov Y.V.

Abstract

Data on the dynamics of the plasma current quench in the Globus-M tokamak are presented. The main current quench characteristics at different toroidal magnetic fields are compared. The distribution of the toroidal current induced in the vessel wall is determined from magnetic measurements, and the electromagnetic loads acting on the vessel wall during the current quench are calculated. By extrapolating the experimental data, the additional pressure on the vessel wall during the current quench in the upgraded Globus-M2 tokamak is estimated. It is shown that the current quench results in the appearance of bending stresses in the vessel domes. Using numerical simulations, it is shown that the best agreement between the measured and calculated plasma current dynamics during the current quench corresponds to the linear (in time) influx of the carbon impurity.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):387-397
pages 387-397 views

Oscillations and Waves in Plasma

Influence of Electron Collisions on the Breaking of Plasma Oscillations

Frolov A.A., Chizhonkov E.V.

Abstract

The influence of electron collisions on the breaking of plane nonlinear plasma oscillations is analyzed. Numerical calculations by the particle method and analytical consideration in the weakly nonlinear regime show that the breaking time of plasma oscillations increases with increasing electron collision frequency. The threshold value of the electron collision frequency above which no singularity in the electron density arises is found. In this case, the density maximum formed outside the symmetry plane of oscillations, the growth of which in the weakly collisional regime leads to the breaking effect, begins to decrease after some growth because of oscillation damping.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):398-404
pages 398-404 views

Space Plasma

Calculation of Thermal Conductivity Coefficients of Electrons in Magnetized Dense Matter

Bisnovatyi-Kogan G.S., Glushikhina M.V.

Abstract

The solution of Boltzmann equation for plasma in magnetic field with arbitrarily degenerate electrons and nondegenerate nuclei is obtained by Chapman−Enskog method. Functions generalizing Sonine polynomials are used for obtaining an approximate solution. Fully ionized plasma is considered. The tensor of the heat conductivity coefficients in nonquantized magnetic field is calculated. For nondegenerate and strongly degenerate plasma the asymptotic analytic formulas are obtained and compared with results of previous authors. The Lorentz approximation with neglecting of electron−electron encounters is asymptotically exact for strongly degenerate plasma. For the first time, analytical expressions for the heat conductivity tensor for nondegenerate electrons in the presence of a magnetic field are obtained in the three-polynomial approximation with account of electron−electron collisions. Account of the third polynomial improved substantially the precision of results. In the two-polynomial approximation, the obtained solution coincides with the published results. For strongly degenerate electrons, an asymptotically exact analytical solution for the heat conductivity tensor in the presence of a magnetic field is obtained for the first time. This solution has a considerably more complicated dependence on the magnetic field than those in previous publications and gives a several times smaller relative value of the thermal conductivity across the magnetic field at ωτ * 0.8.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):405-423
pages 405-423 views

Time Evolution of the Macroscopic Characteristics of a Thin Current Sheet in the Course of Its Formation in the Earth’s Magnetotail

Domrin V.I., Malova H.V., Popov V.Y.

Abstract

A numerical model is developed that allows tracing the time evolution of a current sheet from a relatively thick current configuration with isotropic distributions of the pressure and temperature in an extremely thin current sheet, which plays a key role in geomagnetic processes. Such a configuration is observed in the Earth’s magnetotail in the stage preceding a large-scale geomagnetic disturbance (substorm). Thin current sheets are reservoirs of the free energy released during geomagnetic disturbances. The time evolution of the components of the pressure tensor caused by changes in the structure of the current sheet is investigated. It is shown that the pressure tensor in the current sheet evolves in two stages. In the first stage, a current sheet with a thickness of eight to ten proton Larmor radii forms. This stage is characterized by the plasma drift toward the current sheet and the Earth and can be described in terms of the Chu–Goldberger–Low approximation. In the second stage, an extremely thin current sheet with an anisotropic plasma pressure tensor forms, due to which the system is maintained in an equilibrium state. Estimates of the characteristic time of the system evolution agree with available experimental data.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):424-437
pages 424-437 views

Plasma−Surface Interaction

Study of Gallium Arsenide Etching in a DC Discharge in Low-Pressure HCl-Containing Mixtures

Dunaev A.V., Murin D.B.

Abstract

Halogen-containing plasmas are often used to form topological structures on semiconductor surfaces; therefore, spectral monitoring of the etching process is an important diagnostic tool in modern electronics. In this work, the emission spectra of gas discharges in mixtures of hydrogen chloride with argon, chlorine, and hydrogen in the presence of a semiconducting gallium arsenide plate were studied. Spectral lines and bands of the GaAs etching products appropriate for monitoring the etching rate were determined. It is shown that the emission intensity of the etching products is proportional to the GaAs etching rate in plasmas of HCl mixtures with Ar and Cl2, which makes it possible to monitor the etching process in real time by means of spectral methods.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):438-444
pages 438-444 views

Low-Temperature Plasma

Mechanism of Runaway Electron Generation at Gas Pressures from a Few Atmospheres to Several Tens of Atmospheres

Zubarev N.M., Ivanov S.N.

Abstract

The mechanism of runaway electron generation at gas pressures from a few atmospheres to several tens of atmospheres is proposed. According to this mechanism, the electrons pass into the runaway mode in the enhanced field zone that arises between a cathode micropoint—a source of field-emission electrons—and the region of the positive ion space charge accumulated near the cathode in the tails of the developing electron avalanches. As a result, volume gas ionization by runaway electrons begins with a time delay required for the formation of the enhanced field zone. This process determines the delay time of breakdown. The influence of the gas pressure on the formation dynamics of the space charge region is analyzed. At gas pressures of a few atmospheres, the space charge arises due to the avalanche multiplication of the very first field-emission electron, whereas at pressures of several tens of atmospheres, the space charge forms as a result of superposition of many electron avalanches with a relatively small number of charge carriers in each.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):445-452
pages 445-452 views

Applied Physics

Characteristics of Electron Drift in an Ar–Hg Mixture

Golyatina R.I., Maiorov S.A.

Abstract

The characteristics of electron drift in a mixture of argon with mercury vapor at reduced electric fields of E/N = 1–100 Td are calculated and analyzed with allowance for inelastic collisions. It is shown that even a minor additive of mercury to argon at a level of a fraction of percent substantially affects the discharge parameters, in particular, the characteristics of inelastic processes. The influence of the concentration of mercury vapor in argon on the kinetic characteristics, such as the diffusion and mobility coefficients and ionization frequency, is investigated.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):453-457
pages 453-457 views

Surface Modification of Melamine-Formaldehyde (MF-R) Macroparticles in Complex Plasma

Semenov A.V., Pergament A.L., Scherbina A.I., Pikalev A.A.

Abstract

The surface modification of melamine-formaldehyde (MF-R) macroparticles (4.12 ± 0.09 μm in diameter) in dc glow discharges in neon, argon, and an argon–oxygen mixture (90% Ar, 10% O2) was studied experimentally. The macroparticles were treated in the discharge plasma for 10, 20, 40, and 60 min. The macroparticles were placed in ordered plasma–dust structures and then extracted from them. The results of atomic force microscopy of the surface profile are presented. Quantitative data on destruction of the surface layer and aspects of its modification are discussed. The amount of substance removed from the particle surface for the exposure time was calculated using the fractal analysis method.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):458-461
pages 458-461 views

Experimental Study of Heating of a Liquid Cathode and Transfer of Its Components into the Gas Phase under the Action of a DC Discharge

Sirotkin N.A., Titov V.A.

Abstract

An atmospheric-pressure dc discharge in air (i = 10–50 mA) with metal and liquid electrolyte electrodes was studied experimentally. An aqueous solution of sodium chloride (0.5 mol/L) was used as the cathode or anode. The electric field strength in the plasma and the cathode (anode) voltage drops were obtained from the measured dependences of the discharge voltage on the electrode gap length. The gas temperature was deduced from the spectral distribution of nitrogen emission in the band N2(C3ΠuB3Πg, 0–2). The time dependences of the temperatures of the liquid electrolyte electrodes during the discharge and in its afterglow, as well as the evaporation rate of the solution, were determined experimentally. The contributions of ion bombardment and heat flux from the plasma to the heating of the liquid electrode and transfer of solvent (water) into the gas phase are discussed using the experimental data obtained.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):462-467
pages 462-467 views

A Plasma Focus Device with a 2-MA Discharge Current as a Hard X-Ray Source

Yurkov D.I., Dulatov A.K., Lemeshko B.D., Andreev D.A., Golikov A.V., Mikhailov Y.V., Prokuratov I.A., Selifanov A.N., Fatiev T.S.

Abstract

A device based on a pulsed current generator with capacitive energy storage loaded on a plasma focus (PF) chamber is described. The device provides a discharge current amplitude of up to 2 MA in the PF chamber at a stored energy in the capacitor bank of up to 150 kJ. The PF chamber is designed to study hard X-ray (HXR) emission. It has windows for output of HXR emission in the cathode direction, as well as a special insert for output of HXR emission into the anode cavity. A study of operation of the chamber as a part of the setup with the use of various X-ray targets on the anode has been carried out. At a discharge current of 1.5MA, an HXR pulse with an average duration of 16 ns and energy spectrum from 10 to 200 keV, which provides an absorbed dose in the irradiated samples on the order of 1 Sv, is generated in the PF chamber.

Plasma Physics Reports. 2018;44(4):468-475
pages 468-475 views