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Emission and afterglow properties of an expanding RF plasma with nonuniform neutral gas density

We describe some notable aspects of the light emission and afterglow properties in pulsed, high-density ( 10 18 – 10 20   m − 3 ) argon inductively coupled discharges initiated following fast gas injection. The plasma was created in a long, narrow discharge tube and then expanded downstream of the r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Physics of plasmas 2016-08, Vol.23 (8)
Main Authors: Chaplin, Vernon H., Bellan, Paul M.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:We describe some notable aspects of the light emission and afterglow properties in pulsed, high-density ( 10 18 – 10 20   m − 3 ) argon inductively coupled discharges initiated following fast gas injection. The plasma was created in a long, narrow discharge tube and then expanded downstream of the radiofrequency (RF) antenna into a large chamber. Fast camera images of the expanding plasma revealed a multi-phase time-dependent emission pattern that did not follow the ion density distribution. Dramatic differences in visible brightness were observed between discharges with and without an externally applied magnetic field. These phenomena were studied by tracking excited state populations using passive emission spectroscopy and are discussed in terms of the distinction between ionizing and recombining phase plasmas. Additionally, a method is presented for inferring the unknown neutral gas pressure in the discharge tube from the time-dependent visible and infrared emission measured by a simple photodiode placed near the antenna. In magnetized discharges created with fast gas injection, the downstream ion density rose by Δ n i ∼ 10 18   m − 3 in the first ∼ 100   μ s after the RF power was turned off. The conditions conducive to this afterglow density rise are investigated in detail, and the effect is tentatively attributed to pooling ionization.
ISSN:1070-664X
1089-7674
DOI:10.1063/1.4960326