Physically based fluid modeling of collisionally dominated low-temperature plasmas
Robson, R.E., White, R.D., and Petrovic, Z. Lj. (2005) Physically based fluid modeling of collisionally dominated low-temperature plasmas. Reviews of Modern Physics, 77 (4). pp. 1303-1320.
PDF
Restricted to Repository staff only |
Abstract
This colloquium examines the theoretical modeling of nonequilibrium low-temperature (tens of thousands of degrees) plasmas, which involves a juxtaposition of three distinct fields: atomic and molecular physics, for the input of scattering cross sections; statistical mechanics, for the kinetic modeling; and electromagnetic theory, for the simultaneous solution of Maxwell's equations. Cross sections come either from single-scattering beam experiments or, at very low energies (<0.5 eV), from multiple-scattering experiments on "swarms" in gases—the free diffusion or large Debye length limit of a plasma, where they are embedded in transport coefficient data. The same Boltzmann kinetic theory that has been developed to a high level of sophistication over the past 50 years, specifically for the purpose of unfolding these transport data, can be employed for low-temperature plasmas with appropriate modification to allow for self-consistent rather than externally prescribed fields. A full kinetic treatment of low-temperature plasmas is, however, a daunting task and remains at the developmental level. Fortunately, since the accuracy requirements for modeling plasmas are generally much less stringent than for swarms, such a sophisticated phase-space treatment is not always necessary or desirable, and a computationally more efficient but correspondingly less accurate macroscopic theoretical model in configuration space at the fluid level is often considered sufficient. There has been a proliferation of such fluid modeling in recent times and this approach is now routinely used in the design and development of a large variety of plasma technologies, ranging from plasma display panels to plasma etching reactors for microelectronic device fabrication. However, many of these models have been developed empirically with specific applications in mind, and rigor and sophistication vary accordingly. In this colloquium, starting from the governing Boltzmann kinetic equation, a unified, general formulation of fluid equations is given for both ions and electrons in gaseous media with transparent and internally consistent approximations, all benchmarked against established results. Thereby a fluid model is obtained that is appropriate for practical application but at the same time is based on a firmer physical foundation.
Item ID: | 871 |
---|---|
Item Type: | Article (Research - C1) |
ISSN: | 1539-0756 |
Keywords: | plasma temperature; plasma transport processes; plasma kinetic theory; Boltzmann equation; plasma collision processes |
Additional Information: | © American Physical Society 2005 : This journal is available online - use hypertext links above. |
Date Deposited: | 26 Oct 2006 |
FoR Codes: | 02 PHYSICAL SCIENCES > 0299 Other Physical Sciences > 029999 Physical Sciences not elsewhere classified @ 34% 02 PHYSICAL SCIENCES > 0202 Atomic, Molecular, Nuclear, Particle and Plasma Physics > 020201 Atomic and Molecular Physics @ 33% 02 PHYSICAL SCIENCES > 0202 Atomic, Molecular, Nuclear, Particle and Plasma Physics > 020204 Plasma Physics; Fusion Plasmas; Electrical Discharges @ 33% |
SEO Codes: | 97 EXPANDING KNOWLEDGE > 970102 Expanding Knowledge in the Physical Sciences @ 100% |
Downloads: |
Total: 6 |
More Statistics |