Title :
Pulsed microplasmas generated in truncated paraboloidal microcavities: Simulations of particle densities and energy flow
Author :
Ho-Jun Lee ; Park, Soojin ; Eden, J. Gary
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Pusan Nat. Univ., Busan, South Korea
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Microplasmas generated within cavities having the form of a truncated paraboloid, introduced by Kim et al. [Appl. Phys. Lett. 94, 011503 (2009)], have been simulated numerically with a two-dimensional, fluid computational model. Microcavities with parabolic sidewalls, fabricated in nanoporous alumina (Al2O3) and having upper (primary emitter) and lower apertures of 150 μm and 70 μm in diameter, respectively, are driven by a bipolar voltage waveform at a frequency of 200 kHz. For a Ne pressure of 500 Torr and 2 μs, 290 V pulses constituting each half-cycle of the driving voltage waveform, calculations predict that ~10 nJ of energy is delivered to each parabolic cavity, of which 26-30 % is consumed by the electrons. Once the cathode fall is formed, approximately 65% and 8% of the input energy is devoted to driving the atomic ion and dimer ion (Ne2+) currents, respectively, and the peak electron density of ~6·1012 cm-3 is attained ~90 ns following the onset of the first half-cycle (positive) voltage pulse. Specific power loading of the microplasma reaches 150 kW-cm-3 and the loss of power to the wall of the microcavity drops by as much as 22% when the excitation voltage is increased from 280 V to 310 V. The diminished influence of diffusion with increasing pressure is responsible for wall losses at 600 Torr accounting for 20% of the total electron energy.
Keywords :
electron density; neon; numerical analysis; plasma density; plasma simulation; plasma sources; plasma transport processes; plasma-wall interactions; 2D fluid computational model; Ne; Ne pressure; atomic ion current; bipolar voltage waveform; cathode fall; diffusion; dimer ion current; driving voltage waveform half-cycle; energy flow simulation; excitation voltage; frequency 200 kHz; half-cycle voltage pulse onset; input energy; lower aperture; microcavity wall; microplasma specific power loading; nanoporous alumina; numerical simulation; parabolic cavity; parabolic sidewalls; particle density simulation; peak electron density; power loss; pressure 500 torr; pressure 600 torr; pulsed microplasmas; size 150 mum; size 70 mum; time 2 mus; total electron energy; truncated paraboloid form; truncated paraboloidal microcavities; upper aperture; voltage 280 V to 310 V; wall losses; Cavity resonators; Computational modeling; Educational institutions; Electrical engineering; Laboratories; Microcavities; Optical device fabrication;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science (ICOPS), 2012 Abstracts IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Edinburgh
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-2127-4
Electronic_ISBN :
0730-9244
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2012.6384054