4.3 Article

Electrical Model for Complex Surface DBD Plasma Sources

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PLASMA SCIENCE
Volume 49, Issue 10, Pages 3051-3058

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TPS.2021.3110437

Keywords

Electrodes; Plasmas; Plasma sources; Discharges (electric); Fault location; Surface discharges; Integrated circuit modeling; Dielectric barrier discharge (DBD); electrical model; flexible electrode; low-temperature plasma; plasma medicine

Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [1939331]
  2. Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL) [DSTLX-1000126208]
  3. Academic Health Sciences Centre through the AHSC Competition Award
  4. EPSRC [1939331] Funding Source: UKRI

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Electrical models play a crucial role in characterizing nonthermal plasma sources, with new model focusing on complex electrode designs showing reasonable agreement with measurements.
Electrical models can play a crucial role in the characterization, design, and definition of optimal operating conditions of nonthermal plasma sources in a wide field of applications. Various electrical models are available from the literature, with most modeling the behavior of volume dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasma sources. Although electrical models for surface DBD plasma sources are presented from the plasma actuator community, these models are limited to simple and mostly linear surface DBD plasma sources. This study presents a new electrical model focusing on surface DBD plasma sources with complex electrode designs. The proposed model employs the ratio of the electrode surface into a discharging and nondischarging area to consider complex electrode designs, such as meshed and hexagonal electrodes. Microdischarges during plasma ignition phase have been modeled through the superposition of a discharge current to the displacement current. The proposed electrical model has been validated over a large range of operating conditions. It is shown that the simulated electrical characteristics using the developed model are in reasonable agreement with measurements.

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