A computational study on the effects of fast-rising voltage on ionization fronts initiated in sub-mm air and CO2 gaps

Timothy Wong*, Igor Timoshkin, Scott MacGregor, Mark Wilson, Martin Given

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Gas discharge and breakdown phenomena have become increasingly important for the development of an ever-growing number of applications. The need for compact and miniaturized systems within power, pulsed power, semiconductor, and power electronic industries has led to the imposing of significant operating electric field stresses on components, even within applications with low operating voltages. Consequently, the interest in gas discharge processes in sub-millimeter and microscale gaps has grown, as the understanding of their initiation and propagation is critical to the further optimization of these technologies. In this work, a computational study of primary ionization fronts has been conducted, which systematically investigated the role of voltage rate-of-rise in point-plane and point-point electrode geometries with an inter-electrode gap maintained at 250 μm and a needle radius of 80 μm. Using the hydrodynamic approach with the local mean energy approximation, along with simplified plasma chemistry, simulations have been performed under positive and negative ramp voltages, rising at 50, 25, 16.67, 12.5, and 10 kV/ns in synthetic air and in pure CO2. Results on the developed electric field, electron densities, and propagation velocities are presented and discussed. Effects on the cathode sheath thickness scaling with voltage rate-of-rise have been additionally analyzed, the mechanisms behind these effects and their potential impacts are discussed. The work conducted in this study contributes towards an increased understanding of the gas discharge process, under fast-transients and nonuniform electric fields, with relevance to microelectromechanical, power, and pulsed power system
design.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1185
Number of pages14
JournalScientific Reports
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Jan 2024

Keywords

  • air
  • cathode electrode
  • electric field
  • electric potential
  • hydrodynamics
  • semiconductor

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A computational study on the effects of fast-rising voltage on ionization fronts initiated in sub-mm air and CO2 gaps'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this