4.6 Article

Measurement of gas temperature and OH density in the afterglow of pulsed positive corona discharge

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 41, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0022-3727/41/3/035204

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The gas temperature and OH density in the afterglow of pulsed positive corona discharge are measured using the laser-induced predissociation fluorescence (LIPF) of OH radicals. Discharge occurs in a 13 mm point-to-plane gap in an atmospheric-pressure H(2)O(2.8%)/O(2)(2.0%)/N(2) mixture. The temperature measurement shows that (i) the temperature increases after discharge and (ii) the temperature near the anode tip (within 1 mm from the anode tip) is much higher than that of the rest of the discharge volume. Near the anode tip, the temperature increases from 500K (t = 0 mu s) to 1100K (t = 20 mu s), where t is the postdischarge time, while it increases from 400K (t = 0 mu s) to 700K (t = 100 mu s) in the rest of the discharge volume away from the anode tip. This temperature difference between the two volumes (near and far from the anode tip) causes a difference in the decay rate of OH density: OH density near the anode tip decays approximately 10 times slower than that far from the tip. The spatial distribution of OH density shows good agreement with that of the secondary streamer luminous intensity. This shows that OH radicals are mainly produced in the secondary streamer, not in the primary one.

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