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Energy exchange modulation for selective control of gas temperature and electron number density in cold atmospheric plasmas

  • Jing Li
  • , Chuan Fang
  • , Jian Chen
  • , He Ping Li*
  • , Zhi Bin Wang
  • , Qiu Yue Nie
  • , Heng Guo
  • , Xiang Zhao
  • , Lu Xiang Zhao
  • , Yu Zhang
  • , Kostya Ken Ostrikov
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Tsinghua University
  • Sun Yat-Sen University
  • School of Electrical Engineering and Automation, Harbin Institute of Technology
  • Queensland University of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Selective control of the key parameters of the cold atmospheric plasmas (CAPs) is crucial for diverse applications ranging from materials processing, clinical medicine to clean energy generation. In particular, the low gas temperature (T g) and high electron number density (n e) are both critical for obtaining high treatment efficiency of heat-sensitive materials, yet are challenging to achieve because of the very frequent species collision nature in CAPs. In this paper, selective control of T g and n e in a helium CAP driven by a radio-frequency power supply and operated in an open environment is achieved successfully for the first time numerically and experimentally with the quasi-independent variation windows from-33.7 °C to 49.5 °C (i.e. 239.3 to 322.5 K) for T g and from 2.7 × 1016 to 6.3 × 1016 m-3 for n e. This result has expanded the key CAP parameter windows significantly into a previously unachievable domain. The further theoretical analysis of the energy transfer and balance based on the 'energy tree' concept and numerical modeling reveals the unique non-equilibrium energy transfer channel allowing selective control of T g and n e. This energy transfer channel is enabled by the two 'valves', one for controlling the energy deposition from the external circuit to the discharge cell (valve 1), and another one for controlling the energy exchange between the discharge cell and the environment (valve 2). Our conceptual approach and proof-of-principle demonstration open a new way for the active and selective control of the key CAP parameters, which will be quite important for designing CAP sources with specific requirements and for advancing or even creating new CAP applications in the future.

Original languageEnglish
Article number055015
JournalPlasma Sources Science and Technology
Volume31
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • atmospheric-pressure glow discharge plasma
  • collision-dominated plasmas
  • modulation of key plasma parameters
  • non-equilibrium synergistic transport

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