Mechanism of Cataphoretic Segregation in Inert Gas Glow Discharges
- 1 September 1958
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 29 (9) , 1369-1371
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1723442
Abstract
The collection of a minority gas species at the cathode in a glow discharge, termed cataphoresis, appears not to have been completely successfully explained. Observation indicates that in all cases, the minority gas segregated at the cathode, must be capable of being very effectively ionized by the vehicular gas. The recent discovery of the effective creation of ion complexes such as NeHe+ and NeA+ in pressure dependent reactions above some mm of Hg pressure by Oskam, the independent direct observation of these ions and the production of ions such as HeH+, NeH+, and AH+ with 1% H2 in the inert gas by Weimer, using the effusion mass spectrometer of Pahl, render a basis for the extension of the Druyvesteyn theory developed for metallic ions in inert gas to the general process, aid in the explanation of the Hg‐Xe anomaly observed by Kenty, and indicate certain needed corrections which are acting to make the process more efficient.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Massenspektrometrischer Nachweis des Molekelions (HeNe)+ in der positiven SäuleThe Science of Nature, 1957
- The Analysis and Purification of Rare Gases by Means of Electric DischargesJournal of Applied Physics, 1954
- Processes Involving Ions and Metastable Atoms in Mercury AfterglowsPhysical Review B, 1953
- The electrophoresis in the positive column of a gas dischargePhysica, 1935
- XXIV. Separation and striation of rarefied gases under the influence of the electric dischargeJournal of Computers in Education, 1893