• DocumentCode
    2884950
  • Title

    Diffusive radial expansion effect on long-Rail spark dynamical impedances

  • Author

    Wang, Lawrence S N

  • Author_Institution
    Survivability & Vulnerability Assessment Directorate, Electromagn. Survivability Div., US Army, White Sands Missile Range, NM, USA
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    26-30 June 2011
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    1
  • Abstract
    Summary form only given. By close examinations over the numerical simulations based on Rompe and Weisel (R&W) spark gap model, the calculated peaks and rise times of gap transient currents are significantly lower and slow than the empirical data extracted from recent experimental works for the preliminary designed prototype Direct Strike Lightning (DSL) Test Facility. This implies the gap dynamical resistance R<;sub>;s<;/sub>;(t) implemented for employed Rail Gap Switch (RGS) in our SPARKGAP computational code is quite larger and decreasing slower than interpreted data from DSL experiments. These discrepancies are mainly originated from the RGS features of specific geometric structure and triggering schemes. First, it is discharged physically through multi-channels (i.e., plasma columns) rather than only one plasma column across the long rail gap within hemi-cylindrical electrodes as breakdown initiated by the rapid rising electric pulse imposed from a knife-edged triggering plate. Meanwhile the numbers of plasma columns across the gap are inevitably fudged input to the code in order to cope with empirical data. Secondly, in R&W model, the plasma column(s) formed are considered conductive only along axial z-direction with fixed radius r across the gap ± electrodes; however, the (charged) particles in (each) plasma column(s) propagating along radial r-direction through diffusion mechanism. Though radial diffusive process of order over micro-second (μs) is much slower than axial drift process of order less than nano-second (ns) due to electron diffusion vdiffuse≪ drift velocity vdiffuse for high axial field Ez, but the dramatic temperature increasing in plasma columns and long-sustained bank discharging over μs will enhance diffusion (coefficient De) resulting in significant increasing in vdiffuse. This effect is negligible for short-lived pulses of ns ran- e but will definitely augment the RGS discharging of μs range. Thus, plasma radial r-expansions will be particularly manifested in RGS impulses. The primary purpose here is to improve the deficiencies in R&W model as described for diffusive radial expansion phenomena across long rail gap by means of characteristic method for electron continuity equation involving ionized sources and corrections with photo-ionizations and radiation losses from accelerated charged particles ignored previously.
  • Keywords
    numerical analysis; photoionisation; plasma simulation; plasma temperature; plasma transport processes; spark gaps; SPARKGAP computational code; axial drift process; diffusion coefficient; diffusion mechanism; diffusive radial expansion effect; direct strike lightning test facility; drift velocity; electron continuity equation; electron diffusion process; gap dynamical resistance; gap transient currents; geometric structure; hemicylindrical electrode; knife-edged triggering plate; long-rail spark dynamical impedance; long-sustained bank discharge; numerical simulation; photoionization loss analysis; plasma column; plasma radial r-expansion process; radial diffusive process; radiation loss analysis; rail gap switch; rising electric pulse; spark gap model; triggering schemes; Computational modeling; Plasmas;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Plasma Science (ICOPS), 2011 Abstracts IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Chicago, IL
  • ISSN
    0730-9244
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-61284-330-8
  • Electronic_ISBN
    0730-9244
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/PLASMA.2011.5993317
  • Filename
    5993317