Title :
Spatiotemporal evolution of a single-electrode nanosecond pulsed microplasma jet over water
Author :
Shutong Song ; Lane, Jamie L. ; Chunqi Jiang
Author_Institution :
Frank Reidy Res. Center, Bioelectrics Old Dominion Univ. Norfolk, Norfolk, VA, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Biomedical applications, in particular, the application for root canal disinfection, have motivated fundamental studies of single-electrode microplasma jets. In this work, a single-electrode nanosecond pulsed microplasma jet and its interaction with liquid water are evaluated via spatiotemporal optical emission spectroscopy as well as nanosecond gated imaging. The helium microplasma jet was generated in atmospheric air by delivering 8 kV, 164 ns pulses at a pulse repetition rate of 500 Hz. When the microplasma jet impinged on water surface, the spatiotemporal optical emission spectroscopy identified a number of reactive plasma species including O*, OH*, He*, N2*, N2+*, and Hα*. The presence of liquid water produced an approximately 10 times increase in the optical emission intensity compared to water not being present. As such, the presence of water has led to a significant increase in OH radical concentrations. Nanosecond gated imaging showed that the radius of the plasma plume varied with time between the nozzle and the water surface and presented a different propagation behavior from those in air.
Keywords :
discharges (electric); helium; hydrogen neutral atoms; nitrogen; nozzles; oxygen; oxygen compounds; plasma chemistry; plasma diagnostics; plasma jets; spatiotemporal phenomena; water; H; H2O; He; N2; O; OH; OH radical concentrations; atmospheric air; helium microplasma jet; liquid water; nanosecond gated imaging; nozzle; optical emission intensity; plasma plume radius; pressure 1 atm; propagation behavior; reactive plasma species; root canal disinfection; single-electrode nanosecond pulsed microplasma jet; spatiotemporal evolution; spatiotemporal optical emission spectroscopy; time 164 ns; voltage 8 kV; water surface; Biomedical optical imaging; Electrodes; Liquids; Optical imaging; Optical pulses; Spatiotemporal phenomena; Stimulated emission;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Sciences (ICOPS), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Antalya
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2015.7179943