4.6 Article

Full spatial-field visualization of gas temperature in an air micro-glow discharge by calibrated Schlieren photography

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 51, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6463/aaa882

Keywords

microdischarge; calibrated Schlieren photography; full gas-temperature field; optical emission spectroscopy; UV Rayleigh scattering

Funding

  1. Hundred-Talent Program of Chongqing University
  2. Graduate Research and Innovation Foundation of Chongqing [CYS17007]
  3. National '111' Project of China [B08036]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11405144]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [20720150022]

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Gas temperature is an important basic parameter for both fundamental research and applications of plasmas. In this work, efforts were made to visualize the full spatial field of gas temperature (T-g) in a microdischarge with sharp T-g gradients by a method of calibrated Schlieren (CS) photography. Compared to other two typical diagnostic approaches, optical emission spectroscopy (OES) and Rayleigh scattering, the proposed CS method exhibits the ability to capture the whole field of gas temperature using a single Schlieren image, even the discharge is of non-luminous zones like Faraday dark space (FDS). The image shows that the T-g field in the studied micro-glow air discharge expands quickly with the increase of discharge currents, especially in the cathode region. The two-dimensional maps of gas temperature display a 'W-shape' with sharp gradients in both areas of negative and positive glows, slightly arched distributions in the positive column, and cooling zones in the FDS. The obtained T-g fields show similar patterns to that of the discharge luminance. With an increase in discharge currents, more electric energy is dissipated by heating air gas and inducing constriction of the low-temperature FDS. Except in the vicinities of electrode boundaries, due to the interference from optical diffraction, the estimated gas temperature distributions are of acceptable accuracy, confirmed by the approaches of OES and UV Rayleigh scattering.

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