100X Speed-up of Particle-In-Cell (PIC) Langmuir Probe Simulation

ORAL

Abstract

Interpreting Langmuir probe data in real-world conditions can be very difficult---e.g., with non-ideal geometries, space charge and non-zero electric field (in the absence of the probe), collisionality, secondary emission, etc. With enough computational power, PIC simulation can precisely characterize probe responses to various plasma conditions, self-consistently including non-ideal effects, thus helping to interpret real probe data. Unfortunately, PIC simulation can be prohibitively expensive, partly because the cost scales with the square root of the ion/electron mass ratio, $\sqrt{m_i/m_e}$. Fortunately, the steady-state Vlasov-Poisson system scales trivially with ion mass, so probes in electron-ion plasma can be equivalently simulated in electron-positron plasma, speeding up computation by $\sqrt{m_i/m_e}$, e.g., by more than 100$\times$ for argon ions. The resulting solution yields the correct self-consistent charge density and electric potential for the electron-ion system. This approach is equivalent to the speed-limited PIC (SLPIC) method with a particularly simple speed-limiting function; moreover, SLPIC provides a systematic treatment for speeding up simulation by $\sqrt{m_i/m_e}$ while accurately treating collisionality, secondary emission, and magnetic fields.

*This work is supported by NSF, DOE, and NASA.

Authors

  • Gregory Werner

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Andrew Chap

    • Tech-X Corp.
  • Thomas Jenkins

    • Tech-X Corporation
    • Tech-X Corp.
  • John Cary

    • University of Colorado, Boulder, and Tech-X Corp.
  • Scott Robertson

    • University of Colorado, Boulder