Title :
High-Pressure Microdischarges: Sources of Ultraviolet Radiation
Author :
Schoenbach, Karl H. ; Zhu, WeiDong
Author_Institution :
Frank Reidy Res. Center for Bioelectrics, Old Dominion Univ., Norfolk, VA, USA
fDate :
6/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Spatially confined plasmas with dimensions in the submillimeter range have been found to be stable at atmospheric pressure. These microplasmas are nonequilibrium plasmas with an electron energy distribution which contains a significant fraction of high energy electrons. This favors, in combination with the high gas density, the formation of excimers. The possibility for operating these discharges in parallel, or expanding the nonequilibrium plasma two-dimensionally on a flat cathode allows for extended area light-sources, including excimer lamps. The spectral range of these lamps reaches from the visible into the vacuum ultraviolet, down to wavelengths of 75 nm for helium excimer radiation. Highest efficiencies of 6-9% were obtained for xenon excimers when the discharge was operated dc, and 20% when operated in a nanosecond pulsed mode. Besides excimer radiation, microdischarges have also been shown to emit intense line radiation in the vacuum ultraviolet when noble gases with small admixtures of hydrogen and oxygen were used. In this paper, we discuss basic properties of several types of high-pressure microplasmas, focusing on their dc and pulsed dc operation, followed by an overview of the experimental and modeling results relevant for their use as ultraviolet light sources. The prospect of developing microplasma lamps by forming arrays of microdischarges and possibly excimer lasers by operating microdischarges in series is briefly discussed.
Keywords :
discharges (electric); excimer lasers; helium; light sources; plasma density; plasma diagnostics; plasma pressure; plasma sources; plasma transport processes; He; atmospheric pressure; electron energy distribution; excimer formation; excimer lamps; helium excimer radiation; high energy electron fraction; high gas density; high-pressure microdischarges; hydrogen-oxygen admixtures; intense line radiation; microplasma lamps; nanosecond pulsed mode; nonequilibrium plasma; pressure 1 atm; pulsed dc operation; spatially confined plasma; submillimeter range; two-dimensional nonequilibrium plasma; ultraviolet radiation sources; vacuum ultraviolet; wavelength 75 nm; xenon excimers; Cathodes; Discharges (electric); Fault diagnosis; Glow discharges; Plasmas; Xenon; Excimer radiation; high-pressure gas discharges; microdischarges; nonequilibrium plasma; ultraviolet radiation;
Journal_Title :
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JQE.2012.2185686