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Three Dimensional Coupled Fluid-Droplet Model For Atmospheric Pressure Plasmas
Date Issued
2014
Date Available
2014-09-26T09:19:32Z
Abstract
A three-dimensional coupled fluid-droplet model is developed specifically to characterize the significance of droplet-plasma interaction at atmospheric pressure. The liquid droplet introduces a perturbation in atmospheric pressure plasma (APP) and under many conditions, the behavior of this perturbation is not clear during transport in PlasmaStream system. In this study, we identify the importance of ionization mechanism in two-phase flow. The affect and spatial expansion of vaporization in discharge plasma depend on the flow rate of liquid precursors. Penning ionization is recognized as the leading process along the pulse of evaporating droplets as compared to other ionization processes that explain the relevance of small nitrogen impurities in an APP. The influence of different precursors, such as Hexamethyldisiloxane, Tetraethyl orthosilicate and water is described by contrasting the implication of the evaporation process along the pulse of droplets in the APP. Finally, we validate the numerical simulation by comparison with the experimental observations of droplet size distributions using a laser diffraction particle size analysis technique as a part of atmospheric pressure plasma jet deposition system.
Sponsorship
Science Foundation Ireland
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Plasma Processes and Polymers
Volume
12
Issue
3
Start Page
201
End Page
213
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Three_Dimensional_Coupled_Fluid-Droplet_Model_For_Atmospheric_Pressure_Plasmas.pdf
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