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Large-amplitude oscillations in a Townsend discharge in lowcurrent limit Vladimir Khudik, Alex Shvydky (Plasma Dynamics Corp., MI) Abstract We have developed a regular analytical approach to study oscillations in a Townsend discharge when the distortion of the electric field in the discharge gap due to the spatial charge is small. In presented theory the secondary electron emission coefficient can take any value between zero and one. We have found that the large-amplitude oscillations of the particle current in the discharge gap are accompanied by small-amplitude oscillations of the gap voltage. Surprisingly, for certain impedances of the external electrical circuit, this highly dissipative system is governed by the Hamiltonian equations (so that the amplitude of the oscillations slowly changes in time). Direct Monte Carlo/particle-in-cell simulations confirm the theoretical results. Standard Circuit • This circuit is commonly use for experimental and theoretical studies of oscillations and stability of Townsend discharge V0 Vbr jstationary when R Rdiff R • Usually, the value of the resistor R is such that the major portion of the external voltage drops across the discharge gap ( V0 Vbr Vbr). • Our consideration also includes the case V0 Vbr Vbr External applied voltage V0=const • A.V.Phelps et al., 1993 • V.N. Melekhin and N.Yu. Naumov, 1985 Barrier Discharge Circuit • Townsend discharge in barrier discharge geometry is used for addressing micro-discharge cells in plasma televisions dV (t ) jstationary Cdiel dt V • L.F. Weber, 1998 • V.P. Nagorny et al., 2000 • To realize a dc Townsend discharge in this circuit, external applied voltage must change linearly with time t Basic Equations Perturbation Procedure L e ni ji je t x x dx x e cath • Small parameter E 4e ni x 1 d E cath (1 ) ji 4 dt cath jdisch Boundary conditions anode 0, je cath ji cath • Electron transit time across the gap t e Toscill ne 0 t i t ch L i E0 E0 1 4 jdisch • First, we derive the equation for perturbation of ion density and solve it by method of successive approximations Complementing circuit equation ji for oscillations of small amplitude and frequency 0 < w < te-1 • Then, we immediately obtain the expression for the discharge impedance Discharge Impedance b ~ iw N w S 4 L Z disch t ch ~ w 2 Nw a t it ch iw c t ch ~ where Nw is proportional to perturbation of the number of ions in the gap at frequency w ; coefficients a, b, and c depend on the parameters of steady-state discharge and the shape of ion density perturbation The dispersion equation for natural oscillations in the circuit with impedance Zcirc: Z disch (w ) Z circ (w ) 0 For the standard circuit Z circ (w ) 1 R 1 iw Csh For the barrier discharge circuit Z circ (w ) R 1 iw Cdiel Spectrum of oscillations • In the zeroth approximation in parameter ( jdisch 0 ) there exist two different types of oscillations • Oscillations in the system “external circuit + capacitance of empty discharge gap” • Oscillations of the discharge current described by the dispersion equation exp[ iwt i ( E0 ) L] 1 1 iwt i ( E0 ) L ( E0 ) L - High-frequency harmonics ( Re wm ~ 2mt i 1 , m 1,2,... ) quickly damp in time ( Im wm ~ t i )1 without perturbation of the total charge in the gap - Low-frequency harmonic oscillates slowly with the frequency w0 t i1. Perturbation of the ion density has the same shape in the gap as the stationary ion density does ( E0 ) x ~ n n 1 e i i stationary Low frequency oscillations in standard circuit ti tR ti b0 k c c0 tR R Rdiff 0 a0 b0 2 a0 oscillation region c 0 k* Stability triangle in the plane of circuit parameters kc ti ti t R Cdisch R (case Rdiff ( E ) 0 ) 4k* kc Csh and Cdisch Nonlinear Low-Frequency Oscillations • Remarkable feature of the system is that large pulses of the particle current cause small oscillations of the electric field E E0 E0 jparticle jstationary 12 • Spatial distortion of the electric field due to the volume charge is quite small Ecathode Eanode 12 stationary j E0 jparticle jstationary • Ion current in large amplitude oscillations is distributed in the gap almost the same way as the ion current in steady-state discharge ji 1 e ( E0 ) x • We consider the case when Rdiff is negative and does not depend on discharge current Rdiff ( E ) 0 Hamiltonian function on the hypotenuse of the stability triangle H e P 1 2 H H Q , P P Q P e Q 2 Rdiff R Q ln j, P ln 1 V j • Blue line (P = separate the regions of stability and instability: oscillations with relatively small amplitude are stable and oscillations of sufficiently large amplitude are unstable. • Equation of separatrix in dimensionful parameters: V V0 Rdiff j, Rdiff 0! Q 2 V j Phase curves in general case • Phase curve corresponding to the circuit parameters inside the stability triangle • Phase curve corresponding to the circuit parameters outside the stability triangle V V j • More accurate analysis shows that in the case of circuit parameters outside the stability region close to hypotenuse, phase curves asymptotically approach limiting cycle (and do not “infinitely” depart from the steady state) • Size of the limiting cycles is a sharp function of the distance to the hypotenuse. j Monte-Carlo/PIC simulations • Voltage across the discharge gap is always close to the breakdown voltage so that for not too small secondary electron emission coefficients, the spatial distribution of ions created by the electron avalanche is different from exponential one eL 1 1 • Secondary electron emission coefficient depends on the properties of the cathode surface, gas pressure, and the magnitude of the electric field. To avoid these complications, we assumed that all electrons emitted from the cathode have zero energy, so that always vacuum 0.3 • Simulation parameters: Ne gas with pressure = 500 Torr, gap length = 400 m, Vbr = 200 V, number of ions used in simulations ~ 105 Numerical Experiment • Standard circuit with R=, Csh=0 (constant current source, j=8A/cm2). The parameter = 0.02. jparticle jstationary Voltage across the discharge gap vs. time; red lines correspond to damping rate predicted by the theory • Period of nonlinear oscillations ti T ~ 12 jmax jstationary Particle current vs. time; red line is analytical solution (when damping is neglected) • Minimum value of particle current jmin ~ jmax e jmax jstationary Summary • In general, two types of oscillations can be distinguished in Townsend discharge: • Short-living high-frequency oscillations If initial total charge in the gap Qinitial = Qstationary, oscillations damp in time ~ ti-1 • Long-living low-frequency oscillations Arbitrary distribution of ion density in the gap in short time ~ ti-1 takes the universal shape n 1 e x - the shape of ion density distribution in the steadyi state discharge. This fact allows one to eliminate the dependence of ion current and electric field on spatial variable and obtain the equations for their amplitudes. • For certain parameters of the circuit the small-amplitude oscillations are selfsustained. For these parameters, the system is almost Hamiltonian, so that the amplitude of nonlinear oscillations changes in time very slowly only due to small non-Hamiltonian terms. • All analytical results are obtained for arbitrary secondary emission coefficient 0 1 • Townsend discharge oscillations can be unstable (at large R) even when Rdiff 0