Standard

On the possibility of negative ion concentration growth between pulses of discharge current in oxygen. / Kudryavtsev, A. A.; Tsendin, L. D.

в: Technical Physics Letters, Том 26, № 7, 07.2000, стр. 582-587.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Author

Kudryavtsev, A. A. ; Tsendin, L. D. / On the possibility of negative ion concentration growth between pulses of discharge current in oxygen. в: Technical Physics Letters. 2000 ; Том 26, № 7. стр. 582-587.

BibTeX

@article{2c0b19363b3e470480a350523d747f41,
title = "On the possibility of negative ion concentration growth between pulses of discharge current in oxygen",
abstract = "We present a critical analysis of data available in literature on the degradation of low-pressure oxygen plasma. Special attention is paid to two effects repeatedly observed in the initial stage of plasma degradation: a sharp growth in the flux of negative ions incident on the wall and an increase in the probing current during the laser-induced photodetachment. Both these phenomena are attributed by various authors to an absolute growth in the negative ion concentration. Our analysis shows that the whole body of experimental data cannot be explained based only on the influence of bulk plasmachemical reactions without taking into account special features of the transport processes in electronegative gases. An alternative mechanism is proposed which involves a two-stage degradation of the electronegative gas plasma accompanied by a change in the diffusion regime.",
author = "Kudryavtsev, {A. A.} and Tsendin, {L. D.}",
year = "2000",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1134/1.1262920",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "582--587",
journal = "Technical Physics Letters",
issn = "1063-7850",
publisher = "МАИК {"}Наука/Интерпериодика{"}",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - On the possibility of negative ion concentration growth between pulses of discharge current in oxygen

AU - Kudryavtsev, A. A.

AU - Tsendin, L. D.

PY - 2000/7

Y1 - 2000/7

N2 - We present a critical analysis of data available in literature on the degradation of low-pressure oxygen plasma. Special attention is paid to two effects repeatedly observed in the initial stage of plasma degradation: a sharp growth in the flux of negative ions incident on the wall and an increase in the probing current during the laser-induced photodetachment. Both these phenomena are attributed by various authors to an absolute growth in the negative ion concentration. Our analysis shows that the whole body of experimental data cannot be explained based only on the influence of bulk plasmachemical reactions without taking into account special features of the transport processes in electronegative gases. An alternative mechanism is proposed which involves a two-stage degradation of the electronegative gas plasma accompanied by a change in the diffusion regime.

AB - We present a critical analysis of data available in literature on the degradation of low-pressure oxygen plasma. Special attention is paid to two effects repeatedly observed in the initial stage of plasma degradation: a sharp growth in the flux of negative ions incident on the wall and an increase in the probing current during the laser-induced photodetachment. Both these phenomena are attributed by various authors to an absolute growth in the negative ion concentration. Our analysis shows that the whole body of experimental data cannot be explained based only on the influence of bulk plasmachemical reactions without taking into account special features of the transport processes in electronegative gases. An alternative mechanism is proposed which involves a two-stage degradation of the electronegative gas plasma accompanied by a change in the diffusion regime.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0034335986&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1134/1.1262920

DO - 10.1134/1.1262920

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:0034335986

VL - 26

SP - 582

EP - 587

JO - Technical Physics Letters

JF - Technical Physics Letters

SN - 1063-7850

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 52199577