The results of the experimental and numerical study of high-voltage nanosecond discharge afterglow in pure methane, ethane and propane are presented for room temperature and pressures from 2 to 20 Torr. Time-resolved electron density during the plasma decay was measured with a microwave interferometer for initial electron densities in the range between 5 × 10 10 and 3 × 10 12 cm −3 and the effective recombination coefficients were obtained. Measured effective recombination coefficients increased with gas pressure and were much higher than the recombination coefficients for simple molecular hydrocarbon ions. The properties of plasma in the discharge afterglow were numerically simulated by solving the balance equations for charged particles and electron temperature. Calculations showed that electrons had time to thermalize prior to the recombination. The measured data were interpreted under the assumption that cluster hydrocarbon ions are formed during the plasma decay that is controlled by the dissociative electron recombination with these ions at electron room temperature. Based on the analysis of the experimental data, the rates of three-body formation of cluster ions and recombination coefficients for these ions were estimated.
The results of the experimental and numerical study of high-voltage nanosecond discharge afterglow in H2O:N2 and H2O:O2 mixtures are presented for room temperature and at pressures from 2 to 5 Torr. Time-resolved electron density during the plasma decay was measured with a microwave interferometer for initial electron densities in the range between 1 × 1012 and 2 × 1012 cm−3. Calculations showed that the plasma decay was controlled by recombination of thermalized electrons with H3O+(H2O)n ions for n from 0 to 4. Agreement between calculated and measured electron density histories was obtained only when using the recombination coefficients measured in the pulsed plasma afterglow experiments. The electron densities calculated using the data from the storage ring experiments were consistently greater than the values measured in this work for all conditions. It was concluded that the measurements of recombination coefficients for H3O+(H2O)n ions in the pulsed plasma afterglow were more appropriate for simulating the properties of high-density plasmas with high fractions of H2O, O2 and N2, such as discharge plasmas in water vapor and in humid air instead of the measurements in the storage ring experiments.
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