4.6 Article

Streamer-to-filament transition in pulsed nanosecond atmospheric pressure discharge: 2D numerical modeling

Journal

PLASMA SOURCES SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6595/ad085c

Keywords

plasma; kinetics; 2D modeling; streamer-to-filament transition; nanoseconds

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This study investigates the streamer-to-filament transition in air at atmospheric pressure using a 2D model. The results show the existence of two discharge modes, a glow phase and a filamentary phase, after the formation of a conductive channel. Two filaments form at the cathode and anode and propagate towards the middle of the gap, forming a narrow channel. The gas temperature also increases significantly during this transition. Dissociation and ionization processes play a crucial role in this transition.
The streamer-to-filament transition in air at atmospheric pressure, in a nanosecond pin-to-pin discharge, is studied by a 2D model. The main aim is to implement a kinetic scheme providing a sharp electron density increase to the 2D PASSKEy code, to validate the results on the available experimental data, and to investigate the mechanisms responsible for the transition. Results show that after the formation of a conductive channel across the discharge gap, two discharge modes appear during a few nanoseconds: a glow phase, with a relatively homogeneous distribution with the electron density of 1.0x1014 cm-3, and a filamentary phase, with the electron density of 1.0x1018 cm-3. Two filaments appear at the cathode and anode respectively, and propagate towards the middle of the gap with a velocity of about 1.1 & sdot;107 cm s-1, forming a narrow channel. Simultaneously, the gas temperature increases from 350 to 2800 K. The diameter of the channel at the middle gap decreases from 210 to 90 mu m. Dissociation and ionization of the electronically excited states of molecules N2(A 3 n-ary sumation u+ , B 3 pi g , a ' 1 n-ary sumation u- , C 3 pi u ), and ionization of ground and electronically excited states of O and N atoms are the most important processes for the transition. Numerical results also reveal the influence of the memory effect (pre-heating, pre-ionization, and pre-dissociation) from previous pulses on the streamer-to-filament transition.

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