4.5 Article

Laser-heated emissive plasma probe

Journal

REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS
Volume 79, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.2968114

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Communities
  2. Austrian Science Fund [L302-N02]
  3. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P 19901] Funding Source: researchfish

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Emissive probes are standard tools in laboratory plasmas for the direct determination of the plasma potential. Usually they consist of a loop of refractory wire heated by an electric current until sufficient electron emission. Recently emissive probes were used also for measuring the radial fluctuation-induced particle flux and other essential parameters of edge turbulence in magnetized toroidal hot plasmas [R. Schrittwieser et al., Plasma Phys. Controlled Fusion 50, 055004 (2008)]. We have developed and investigated various types of emissive probes, which were heated by a focused infrared laser beam. Such a probe has several advantages: higher probe temperature without evaporation or melting and thus higher emissivity and longer lifetime, no deformation of the probe in a magnetic field, no potential drop along the probe wire, and faster time response. The probes are heated by an infrared diode laser with 808 nm wavelength and an output power up to 50 W. One probe was mounted together with the lens system on a radially movable probe shaft, and radial profiles of the plasma potential and of its oscillations were measured in a linear helicon discharge. (C) 2008 American Institute of Physics.

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