Title :
The spatial and temporal development of pseudospark switch plasmas
Author :
Hartmann, Werner ; Lins, Günter
Author_Institution :
Siemens AG Corp. Res. & Dev., Erlangen, Germany
fDate :
10/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Optical spectroscopy is used to investigate the spatial and temporal development of high-current pseudospark switch plasmas. At a peak discharge current of 12 kA in amplitude and a current reversal of 20%, the electron density is measured from Stark width broadening of the hydrogen Balmer beta line. The peak electron density of ~4×1015 cm-3 is measured briefly after the current maximum. The discharge initially starts on the symmetry axis of the cathode hole. A cylindrical plasma column is observed, which is produced mainly by ionizing collisions of beam electrons formed in the hollow cathode during the early part of the discharge. This plasma column rapidly expands in the radial direction, until it contacts the edge of the cathode hole. The same behavior is found when the Balmer beta line intensity is evaluated rather than the line shape. Although statistically distributed, localized bursts of light are found occasionally, an axially symmetric, homogeneous light intensity distribution is always predominant, and the local arcing is merely superimposed on it. These results confirm that the discharge remains diffuse during most of the current pulse
Keywords :
Stark effect; arcs (electric); glow discharges; plasma collision processes; plasma density; plasma diagnostics; plasma switches; sparks; 12 kA; Balmer beta line; Stark width broadening; beam electrons; cathode hole; current maximum; current pulse; current reversal; cylindrical plasma column; electron density; high-current plasma; hollow cathode; homogeneous light intensity distribution; ionizing collisions; local arcing; localised light burst; optical spectroscopy; peak discharge current; peak electron density; pseudospark switch plasmas; spatial development; symmetry axis; temporal development; Cathodes; Current measurement; Density measurement; Electron beams; Electron optics; Hydrogen; Optical switches; Plasma density; Plasma measurements; Spectroscopy;
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on