Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Plasma pulsing is potentially a powerful tool for controlling the properties of nanoparticles that nucleate and grow in nonthermal plasmas. Numerical simulations were conducted of a capacitively-coupled RF argon-silane dusty plasma (frequency 13.56 MHz, voltage amplitude 55 V, pressure 17 Pa, electrode gap 4 cm). The simulations used a previously reported 1D fluid model, [Warthesen, S.J., et al., 2007; Ravi, L., et al., 2009] in which the plasma equations and the aerosol general dynamics equation are selfconsistently coupled. Effects considered include particle charging by electron and ion attachment, particle coagulation, and particle transport by gas drag, ion drag, electrostatic force, gravity and Brownian diffusion. Profiles of particle nucleation and particle surface growth are treated as input parameters. Simulations consider cases both with and without gas flow through a showerhead electrode. Simulation results show that the behavior of the system during the afterglow is a consequence of the different time scales for particle charging, diffusion of electrons, ions and nanoparticles, particle coagulation and gas drag, together with the initial conditions at the time of plasma switch-off. Even with the applied electric field turned off, the existence of charge carriers in the afterglow affects the system´s evolution via Poisson´s equation. By controlling the time that nanoparticles grow before pulsing begins, and then tuning the pulse frequency and duty cycle, one can manipulate the properties of the nanoparticles and/or the plasma.
Keywords :
Brownian motion; Poisson equation; afterglows; argon; drag; dusty plasmas; electron attachment; high-frequency discharges; nanofabrication; nanoparticles; numerical analysis; plasma collision processes; plasma materials processing; plasma simulation; plasma transport processes; silicon compounds; 1D fluid model; Ar-SiH4; Brownian diffusion; Poisson equation; RF dusty plasma afterglows; aerosol general dynamics equation; capacitively coupled RF argon-silane dusty plasma; distance 4 cm; electron attachment; electron diffusion; electrostatic force; frequency 13.56 MHz; gas drag; gravity; ion attachment; ion diffusion; ion drag; nanoparticle diffusion; nanoparticle growth; nanoparticle nucleation; nanoparticle property control; nonthermal plasmas; particle charging time scale; particle coagulation; particle nucleation profile; particle surface growth profile; particle transport; plasma equations; plasma pulsing; pressure 17 Pa; self-consistent numerical simulations; showerhead electrode; voltage 55 V; Coagulation; Drag; Mathematical model; Nanoparticles; Numerical simulation; Plasmas; Radio frequency;