DocumentCode
1531815
Title
Free-Floating Atmospheric Pressure Ball Plasmas
Author
Wurden, Caroline J v ; Wurden, Glen A.
Author_Institution
Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
Volume
39
Issue
11
fYear
2011
Firstpage
2078
Lastpage
2079
Abstract
Ball plasmas were created in a laboratory, using an electric arc discharge (4-250 A at up to 5 kV) from points of metal onto a water surface. The rising plasmas were studied with still and video cameras, photodiodes, power meters, and spectroscopy. The plasma consists of positive salts from the solution and center electrode material, and negative hydroxyl radicals. Various salts (CuSO4, CuCl2, NaCl, LiCl, and CaCl2) and copper or aluminum center cathode materials were tried. The color is characteristic of the metal from solution. While observing with an Ocean Optics USB 2000 spectrometer, it was confirmed that the material in the cooling (~0.3-eV) plasma, comes from the water and not the surrounding air.
Keywords
arcs (electric); plasma chemistry; plasma diagnostics; Ocean Optics USB 2000 spectrometer; aluminum center cathode; aluminum center cathode materials; copper center cathode materials; current 4 A to 250 A; electric arc discharge; free-floating atmospheric pressure ball plasma; negative hydroxyl radicals; photodiodes; plasma cooling process; positive salt analysis; power meters; pressure 1 atm; spectroscopy method; video cameras; water surface analysis; Copper; Electrodes; Laboratories; Lightning; Materials; Plasmas; Wires; Atmospheric pressure plasmas; digital photography, lightning; physics education; plasma measurements;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0093-3813
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPS.2011.2155090
Filename
5783307
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