The growth of the high-frequency electrodeless discharge

In this paper we consider only discharges in gases at such low pressure that the mean free path of electrons is greater than the size of the vessel. Part I. The elementary theory of the starting of an electrodeless discharge in a gas at low pressure by a uniform high-frequency electric field has been given by Gill & von Engel (1948). It was shown that a discharge will start when the applied field is large enough to cause multiplication of electrons by secondary electron emission from the end-walls of the vessel; initially, gas ionization is absent. Multiplication occurs if an electron starting at one end-wall with a small energy and in a suitable phase of the applied field crosses the vessel in one half-cycle and hits the opposite wall fast enough to release more than one secondary electron. Secondary electrons usually start in a negative phase of the field, but escape from the wall because of their initial energy, unless the phase is more negative than a certain limiting value; this corresponds to the cut-off wave-length, i.e. the longest one at which a discharge can be started. Here, for the first time, the growth of the discharge is treated in detail, the calculations being based on known atomic data only. When secondary electrons leave an end-wall a positive wall charge is left behind, which retards the electrons. This is important only near the cut-off wavelength. These wall charges cause the phase at one wall to become increasingly negative until, finally, the electrons would fail to escape, and the multiplication would cease, which is contrary to experience. However, the growth can be explained by considering the velocity distribution of the secondary electrons. Then a distribution in phase ensues, which must be repeated in successive half-cycles for an avalanche to develop. During this first stage the current is therefore essentially controlled by secondary emission, and grows exponentially with time. At these low pressures electrons rarely collide with gas molecules. Thus the electrons must make many transits across the vessel to form a large number of positive ions. The ions remain almost stationary in the gas; they are nearly uniformly distributed although slightly concentrated at the centre of the vessel. A second stage in the growth of the discharge begins when the ion space charge first appreciably affects the motion of the electrons. Although electrons are still produced mainly at the end-walls, the rate steadily decreases as the ion space charge grows. The rate of production of ions and electrons in the gas also decreases, and losses of both ions and electrons due to self-repulsion become important. The current thus rises more slowly than it would if space charges did not develop, until it reaches a constant value. It is shown that at very low pressures this second stage may not be reached, because self-repulsion of the electrons stops the development earlier. The final equilibrium state for larger pressures is not included in this treatment. This theory predicts the dependence of the growth on the material of the walls, on the nature of the gas and its pressure, and the effect of a field greater than the starting field. Part II. A new experimental technique has been employed to measure the current actually flowing through the discharge. The large capacitative current flowing across the external electrodes is balanced out by a bridge method, the bridge becoming unbalanced when a current flows through the gas. The unbalanced component is proportional to the discharge current and is amplified, rectified and displayed on an oscilloscope. In order to measure the growth of this current with time, pulses of high-frequency potential are applied across the discharge vessel, and the time-base of the oscilloscope synchronized with the pulses. Oscillograms show how the growth of current depends upon the pressure (2 to 35//) and nature of the gas (hydrogen and helium), the excess voltage applied ( < 20 %) and the frequency of the applied field (10 to 20 Mc/s). The spatial distribution of light from the discharge in the final state is also measured, from which the motion of the electrons can be deduced, and compared with theory. Good agreement is obtained between theoretical predictions derived solely from atomic data, and experimental results. These investigations clearly demonstrate that at low pressure the properties of the wall mainly control the multiplication process in the initial stage and thus the starting field, whereas the properties of the gas become important in the later stages and so essentially determine the total time of growth of the discharge.

Lord Rayleigh has drawn attention to an early paper of his which deals with the problem of whether or not, at low pressures, pure oxygen possesses an afterglow. The present author made no reference to this early paper, in an investigation on this same problem, owing, as Lord Rayleigh conjectures, to the inexplicit title of the early paper. Inci­dentally, this early paper of his seems to have been completely ignored by other workers in this field, Herberg and Lewis. Lord Rayleigh believes that if I had made certain slightly different experiments, I would have been led to conclusion identical with his own. He points out that the electrodeless ring discharge and the high frequency electrodeless discharge differ from each other in nature, and he considers that I did not appreciate their difference. He was led to to erroneous conclusion by the inexplicitness of my paper.


Author(s):  
Erhard Reschenhofer ◽  
Manveer K. Mangat

AbstractIn this paper, it is shown that the performance of various frequency-domain estimators of the memory parameter can be boosted by the inclusion of non-Fourier frequencies in addition to the regular Fourier frequencies. A fast two-stage algorithm for the efficient computation of the amplitudes at these additional frequencies is presented. In the first stage, the naïve sine and cosine transforms are computed with a modified version of the Fast Fourier Transform. In the second stage, these transforms are amended by taking the violation of the standard orthogonality conditions into account. A considerable number of auxiliary quantities, which are required in the second stage, do not depend on the data and therefore only need to be computed once. The superior performance (in terms of root-mean-square error) of the estimators based also on non-Fourier frequencies is demonstrated by extensive simulations. Finally, the empirical results obtained by applying these estimators to financial high-frequency data show that significant long-range dependence is present only in the absolute intraday returns but not in the signed intraday returns.


Author(s):  
Nuttee Thungsuk ◽  
Toshifumi Yuji ◽  
Narong Mungkung ◽  
Yoshimi Okamura ◽  
Atsushi Fujimaru ◽  
...  

AbstractThe low-pressure high-frequency plasma chemical vapor deposition (CVD) system was developed with non-thermal plasma process to study the Polyethylene naphthalate (PEN) surface characteristics. Plasma surface treatment by oxygen can improve the adhesive properties. A mixture of Ar and O


1997 ◽  
Vol 3 (S2) ◽  
pp. 609-610 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.L. Thiel ◽  
M.R. Hussein-Ismail ◽  
A.M. Donald

We have performed a theoretical investigation of the effects of space charges in the Environmental SEM (ESEM). The ElectroScan ESEM uses an electrostatic field to cause gas cascade amplification of secondary electron signals. Previous theoretical descriptions of the gas cascade process in the ESEM have assumed that distortion of the electric field due to space charges can be neglected. This assumption has now been tested and shown to be valid.In the ElectroScan ESEM, a positively biased detector is located above the sample, creating an electric field on the order of 105 V/m between the detector and sample surface. Secondary electrons leaving the sample are cascaded though the gas, amplifying the signal and creating positive ions. Because the electrons move very quickly through the gas, they do not accumulate in the specimen-to-detector gap. However, the velocity of the positive ions is limited by diffusion.


Author(s):  
Roque Corral ◽  
Fernando Gisbert

A methodology to minimize blade secondary losses by modifying turbine end-walls is presented. The optimization is addressed using a gradient-based method, where the computation of the gradient is performed using an adjoint code and the secondary kinetic energy is used as a cost function. The adjoint code is implemented on the basis of the discrete formulation of a parallel multigrid unstructured mesh Navier-Stokes solver. The results of the optimization of two end-walls of a low pressure turbine row are shown.


2001 ◽  
Vol 706 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. K. Pradhan ◽  
A. Harutyunyan ◽  
D. Stojkovic ◽  
P. Zhang ◽  
M. W. Cole ◽  
...  

AbstractWe report (6 wt %) storage of H2 at T=77 K in processed bundles of single-walled carbon nanotubes at P=2 atmospheres. The hydrogen storage isotherms are completely reversible. D2 isotherms confirm this anomalous low-pressure adsorption and further reveal the effects of quantum mechanical zero point motion. We propose that our post-synthesis treatment of the sample not only improves access for hydrogen to the central pores within individual nanotubes, but also may create a roughened tube surface with an enhanced binding energy for hydrogen. Such an enhancement is needed to understand the strong adsorption at low pressure. We obtain an experimental isosteric heat qst=125 ± 5 meV for processed SWNT materials.


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