Unlike α- and γ-mode operation, electrons accelerated by strong drift and ambipolar electric fields in the plasma bulk and at the sheath edges are found to dominate the ionization in strongly electronegative discharges. These fields are caused by a low bulk conductivity and local maxima of the electron density at the sheath edges, respectively. This drift-ambipolar mode is investigated by kinetic particle simulations, experimental phase-resolved optical emission spectroscopy, and an analytical model in CF(4). Mode transitions induced by voltage and pressure variations are studied.
Electron heating and ionization dynamics in capacitively coupled radio frequency (RF) atmospheric pressure microplasmas operated in helium are investigated by Particle in Cell simulations and semi-analytical modeling. A strong heating of electrons and ionization in the plasma bulk due to high bulk electric fields are observed at distinct times within the RF period. Based on the model the electric field is identified to be a drift field caused by a low electrical conductivity due to the high electron-neutral collision frequency at atmospheric pressure. Thus, the ionization is mainly caused by ohmic heating in this "Ω-mode". The phase of strongest bulk electric field and ionization is affected by the driving voltage amplitude. At high amplitudes, the plasma density is high, so that the sheath impedance is comparable to the bulk resistance. Thus, voltage and current are about 45 • out of phase and maximum ionization is observed during sheath expansion with local maxima at the sheath edges. At low driving voltages, the plasma density is low and the discharge becomes more resistive resulting in a smaller phase shift of about 4 • . Thus, maximum ionization occurs later within the RF period with a maximum in the discharge center. Significant analogies to electronegative low pressure macroscopic discharges operated in the Drift-Ambipolar mode are found, where similar mechanisms induced by a high electronegativity instead of a high collision frequency have been identified.
Axially and temporally resolved optical emission structures were investigated in the rf sheath region of a parallel plate capacitively coupled rf discharge (13.56 MHz) in pure oxygen and tetrafluoromethane. The rf discharge was driven at total pressures of between 10 and 100 Pa, gas flow rate of 3 sccm and rf power in the range 5–100 W. In particular, the emission of the atomic oxygen at 844.6 nm (3p3P → 3s3S0) and the atomic carbon at 193 nm (3s1P0 → 2p1D) were imaged with a lens onto the entrance slit of a spectrometer and detected by a fast ICCD-camera. The spatio-temporally resolved analysis of the emission intensity during the rf cycle (73.75 ns) provides two significant excitation processes inside the rf sheath: the electron impact excitation at the sheath edge, and heavy particle impact excitation in front of the powered electrode. In oxygen plasma the emission of atomic oxygen was found in both regions whereas in tetrafluoromethane the emission of atomic carbon was observed only in front of the powered electrode. The experimental results reveal characteristic dependence of the emission pattern in front of the powered electrode on plasma process parameters (self-bias voltage, pressure) and allow an estimation of the excitation threshold energy and effective cross section of energetic heavy particle loss.
Phase resolved optical emission spectroscopy (PROES) was used to determine the spatio-temporal behavior of excitation rates in rf sheaths of capacitively coupled plasmas at 13.56 MHz. The plasmas were ignited in pure oxygen at pressures from 20 to 100 Pa and rf powers from 10 to 100 W. The spatial and phase resolved excitation rates have shown four characteristic patterns, which differing in their spatial and temporal position.PIC-MCC simulations of the oxygen capacitively coupled radio-frequency discharge were used to get a detailed microscopic description of the dynamic processes in rf plasmas. The PIC-MCC simulations reproduced the excitation patterns observed in experiment quite well and allowed to identify the underlying physics.Three excitation patterns appearing in front of the powered electrode were found to be due to electron impact dissociative excitation of molecular Oxygen, whereas the fourth pattern very close to the powered electrode is attributed to collisions of the positive ions with the background gas.
Microwave interferometry at 160.28 GHz with Gaussian beam propagation (beam waist: 5 mm) and laser photodetachment were combined for the analysis of negative atomic oxygen ions in the bulk plasma of an asymmetric capacitively coupled 13.56 MHz discharge (cc-rf). The line-integrated negative oxygen ion density amounts to between 2.5 × 10 14 and 10 15 m −2 depending on the oxygen pressure and rf power. Furthermore, the measured decay of the detachment signal reveals two modes of rf oxygen plasma characterized by different electronegativities. High electronegativity, α > 2, is associated with a low decay time constant of only a few microseconds, whereas in oxygen plasmas with low electronegativity, α < 1, the relaxation of electron density needs much longer with typical decay time constants of up to about 100 µs. The transition between the two modes shows a step-like characteristic and was observed at a specific rf power depending on the oxygen pressure. In the case of high electronegativity the electron density relaxation can be described by a simple 0D-attachment-detachment model, taking into consideration a constant density for positive ions and neutral oxygen species. Using the appropriate rate coefficients from the literature and the experimentally determined effective rate coefficients of first order kinetics, the evaluation of the attachment and detachment rates indicates the significant role of O 2 (a 1 g ) in the formation and loss of negative atomic oxygen ions.
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