Study on the plasma sheath over a rectangular depression using dust

POSTER

Abstract

Plasma is a quasi-neutral ionized gas made up of positive ions and electrons. The plasma sheath is a boundary that is formed between the plasma and a material surface. The more mobile electrons are confined by the electric field in the sheath, while the positive ions are pushed out of the plasma. Charged micron-diameter dust particles can levitate in the sheath electric field by balancing their weight with an upward electric force. The vertical confining well is significantly deeper than the horizontal well, creating a two-dimensional dusty plasma. Microscopic dust particles can be used to provide local measurements of properties of the sheath, including Debye length, electric field, and sheath width. A cluster of two dust particles was used to characterize the plasma sheath over a cathode with a rectangular depression. The width of the sheath is inferred from the dust height. The normal mode frequencies are used to calculate the the ellipticity of the sheath edge, the local Debye length, and the vertical electric field. The vertical electric field and the Debye length can be used to approximate the electron temperature.

Authors

  • Nicholas Weiner

    Ohio Northern University

  • Matt Bowers

    University of Notre Dame, University of Bari, Gran Sasso Science Institute, JINA and UND, UTK, LLNL, OU, INFN, TAMU, Universidad Complutense, Madrid, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Division of Nuclear Physics, National Centre for Nuclear Research, Warsaw, Notre Dame University, University of Michigan, Michigan State University, Univ of Notre Dame, Weizmann Institute, Univ of Birmingham, Univ of Michigan, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, The Hebrew University Jerusalem, Indiana University Purdue University Fort Wayne, Professor, University of Notre Dame, Assistant Professor, University of Notre Dame, PhD student, Associate Professor, University of Notre Dame, University of Richmond, University of Surrey, University of Richmond, University of Oslo, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, University of Notre Dame, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Department of Applied Computational Mathematics and Statistics, IUPUI Department of Physics, Indianapolis, IN, Ohio Northern University, Northern Kentucky University, Physics Department, Unversity of Missouri, Physics Department, REU Summer Intern, Sichuan University, Purdue University, Princeton University, Monmouth College, ETH, Switzerland, EPFL, Switzerland, Institut Laue-Langevin, France, Kent State University, University of Tennessee, Indiana University South Bend, University Of Notre Dame