DIFFER
DIFFER Publication

Implications of thermo-chemical instability on the contracted modes in CO2 microwave plasmas

Author
Abstract

Understanding and controlling contraction phenomena of plasmas in reactive flows is essential to optimize the discharge parameters for plasma processing applications such as fuel reforming and gas conversion. In this work, we describe the characteristic discharge modes in a CO2 microwave plasma and assess the impact of wave coupling and thermal reactivity on the contraction dynamics. The plasma shape and gas temperature are obtained from the emission profile and the Doppler broadening of the 777 nm O(5S ← 5P) oxygen triplet, respectively. Based on these observations, three distinct discharge modes are identified in the pressure range of 10 mbar to atmospheric pressure. We find that discharge contraction is suppressed by an absorption cut-off of the microwave field at the critical electron density, resulting in a homogeneous discharge mode below the critical transition pressure of 85 mbar. Further increase in the pressure leads to two contracted discharge modes, one emerging at a temperature of 3000 K to 4000 K and one at a temperature of 6000 K to 7000 K, which correspond to the thermal dissociation thresholds of CO2 and CO respectively. The transition dynamics are explained by a thermo-chemical instability, which arises from the coupling of the thermal-ionization instability to heat transfer resulting from thermally driven endothermic CO2 dissociation reactions. These results highlight the impact of thermal chemistry on the contraction dynamics of reactive molecular plasmas.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Plasma Sources Science and Technology
Volume
29
Issue
2
Number of Pages
025005
DOI
10.1088/1361-6595/ab5eca
PId
d75eaea264a8248b1c3e88a52b7480be
Alternate Journal
Plasma Sources Sci. Technol.
Label
OA
Attachment
Journal Article
Download citation