The influence of the material and the form on the charge of a dust particle in a plasma
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
The world of dusty plasmas is simple: dust particles are perfect spheres, electrons from the plasma that reach the particle are all absorbed, and the charge of the particle q can be determined from its floating potential Φf using q = C · Φf , where C is the electrical capacitance of the particle, equivalent to that of a spherical capacitor.
However, this is not the case in the real world. Dust particles have arbitrary, non-spherical shapes and are made of a wide variety of electrically conductive or insulating materials. A key material property that distinguishes conductive from dielectric particles is the electron-sticking coefficient se. Theoretical calculations predict se to be significantly less than 1 for dielectric particles. Measurement of se is very difficult, as it involves electron energies below 5 eV, and measurement techniques based on electrical conductivity do not work for insulating materials.
We have developed a dusty plasma-based method for measuring se. Using this method, we were able to demonstrate that se is in fact significantly less than 1 for Silica. This is relevant because it affects the secondary electron emission of glass walls. Moreover, previously unexplained observations, such as the selefpropelled motion of the so-called Janus particles, can be explained by this finding.
To determine se for materials such as MgO or Al2O3, which are not spherical, the electrical capacitance of these particles must be known. Through experiments with small clusters of spheres and ZnO tetrapods and simulations of charging of aggregates of monomers, we have shown that the formula q = C · Φf always yields the correct charge if the electrical capacity of the dust particle is used for C. The so-called "orientation-averaged equivalent sphere" provides a very good approximation for calculating the capacitance- However, the "smallest enclosing sphere" approximation is never accurate.
However, this is not the case in the real world. Dust particles have arbitrary, non-spherical shapes and are made of a wide variety of electrically conductive or insulating materials. A key material property that distinguishes conductive from dielectric particles is the electron-sticking coefficient se. Theoretical calculations predict se to be significantly less than 1 for dielectric particles. Measurement of se is very difficult, as it involves electron energies below 5 eV, and measurement techniques based on electrical conductivity do not work for insulating materials.
We have developed a dusty plasma-based method for measuring se. Using this method, we were able to demonstrate that se is in fact significantly less than 1 for Silica. This is relevant because it affects the secondary electron emission of glass walls. Moreover, previously unexplained observations, such as the selefpropelled motion of the so-called Janus particles, can be explained by this finding.
To determine se for materials such as MgO or Al2O3, which are not spherical, the electrical capacitance of these particles must be known. Through experiments with small clusters of spheres and ZnO tetrapods and simulations of charging of aggregates of monomers, we have shown that the formula q = C · Φf always yields the correct charge if the electrical capacity of the dust particle is used for C. The so-called "orientation-averaged equivalent sphere" provides a very good approximation for calculating the capacitance- However, the "smallest enclosing sphere" approximation is never accurate.
*We acknowledge the support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) in project GR 1608/9-1 (Project No. 443791209)
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Publication: [1] A. Mengel et al., "Evidence of Different Charging Behavior of Conductive and Dielectric Materials in Low-Temperature Plasmas and a New Diagnostic for Low-Energy Electron Absorption", PRL 133 (2024), https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.133.185301
[2] A. Mengel et al., "Equivalent spherical capacitor of non-spherical grains in a laboratory dusty plasma", PoP 32 (2025), https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0249630
[3] I. König et al., "Electron sticking coefficients of dusty plasma relevant materials", PoP 32 (2025), https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0251848
Presenters
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Franko Greiner
- Kiel University