Instabilities in a dusty plasma with ion drag and ionization
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review E
- Vol. 59 (1) , 1047-1058
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreve.59.1047
Abstract
Low-frequency modes that develop as a result of an instability in a dusty rf discharge plasma were studied experimentally, leading to an empirical explanation for the instability. In the experiment, particle diameter grew with time. Two instability modes appeared after growth to a sufficient size. A filamentary mode appeared abruptly, and later a great void mode developed as a dust-free region with an intense glow inside and a sharp boundary outside. These modes were characterized by two-dimensional laser light scattering, video imaging, optical emission spectroscopy, Langmuir probe measurements, and Fourier analysis of the fluctuation spectrum. Dust growth was measured by electron microscopy and optical extinction, yielding the dust particle size and dust number density. The electron density was found to be enhanced inside the great void, due to an absence of electron depletion on the dust grains. The great void was explained by the ion drag force, which becomes stronger than the opposing Coulomb force once the particle size reaches a critical diameter. When a dust-free region develops, its electron density is enhanced, the ionization rate increases, and the ion flow that pushes particles outward is further augmented. The plasma used in the experiment grew particles by sputtering of the electrodes, although the same instabilities are expected to occur in other types of dusty plasma discharges as well.Keywords
This publication has 68 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dust acoustic waves in a direct current glow dischargePhysics of Plasmas, 1997
- Dispersion of Plasma Dust Acoustic Waves in the Strong-Coupling RegimePhysical Review Letters, 1996
- Characterization of Ar/Cu electron-cyclotron-resonance plasmas using optical emission spectroscopyJournal of Applied Physics, 1996
- Plasma crystalJournal of Vacuum Science & Technology A, 1996
- Ion-dust streaming instability in processing plasmasJournal of Vacuum Science & Technology A, 1996
- Ion heating in a dusty plasma due to the dust/ion acoustic instabilityGeophysical Research Letters, 1995
- Self-consistent theory of ion acoustic waves in a dusty plasmaPhysics of Plasmas, 1994
- Modelling of radio frequency plasmas in tetrafluoromethane (CF4): the gas phase physics and the role of negative ion detachmentJournal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 1994
- Study of initial dust formation in an Ar-SiH4 discharge by laser induced particle explosive evaporationJournal of Applied Physics, 1994
- Characteristics of a dusty nonthermal plasma from a particle-in-cell Monte Carlo simulationPhysical Review A, 1992