High Voltage (Dec 2023)

A double‐mode planar argon plume produced by varying the distance from an atmospheric pressure plasma jet

  • Kaiyue Wu,
  • Jingnan Liu,
  • Jiacun Wu,
  • Mo Chen,
  • Junxia Ran,
  • Xuexia Pang,
  • Pengying Jia,
  • Xuechen Li,
  • Chenhua Ren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1049/hve2.12327
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 6
pp. 1161 – 1167

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Atmospheric pressure planar plumes are desirable for the applications of low temperature plasmas, such as rapid modification of large‐scale surfaces. Up to now, only single‐mode planar plumes with either a streamer mode or a filamentary mode have been reported in the literature. Distinctive from the single‐mode planar plumes, a double‐mode argon planar plume has been generated in this article, which operates in the streamer mode with a larger distance away from a plasma jet and transits to the filamentary mode with decreasing the distance. Discharge characteristics and plasma parameters are compared for the two modes. Results indicate that the streamer mode and the filamentary mode correspond to pulsed and humped discharges respectively. Fast photography reveals that the streamer‐mode plume is composed of stochastically branching streamers, while the filamentary‐mode plume results from a series of moving filaments similar to those in barrier discharge. In contrast to the streamer mode, the filamentary mode has lower excited electron temperature and vibrational temperature, whereas higher electron density and gas temperature. In addition, better hydrophilicity of polyethylene terephthalate surface is achieved in the filamentary mode.