Numerical Simulation of Nanosecond-Pulse Electrical Discharges

Abstract

Numerical calculations were carried out to examine the physics of the operation of a nanosecond-pulse, single dielectric barrier discharge in a configuration with planar symmetry. This simplified configuration was chosen as a vehicle to develop a physics-based nanosecond discharge model, including realistic air plasma chemistry and compressible bulk gas flow. First, a reduced plasma kinetic model (15 species and 42 processes) was developed by carrying out a sensitivity analysis of zero-dimensional plasma computations with an extended chemical kinetic model (46 species and 395 processes). Transient, one- dimensional discharge computations were then carried out using the reduced kinetic model, incorporating a drift-diffusion formulation for each species, a self-consistent computation of the electric potential using the Poisson equation, and a mass-averaged gas dynamic formulation for the bulk gas motion. Discharge parameters (temperature, pressure, and input waveform) were selected to be representative of recent experiments on bow shock control with a nanosecond discharge in a Mach 5 cylinder flow. The computational results qualitatively reproduce many of the features observed in the experiments, including the rapid thermalization of the input electrical energy and the consequent formation of a weak shock wave. At breakdown, input electrical energy is rapidly transformed (over roughly 1 ns) into ionization products, dissociation products, and electronically excited particles, with subsequent thermalization over a relatively longer time-scale (roughly 10 s). The motivation for this work is modeling nanosecond-pulse, dielectric barrier discharges for applications in high-speed flow control.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2012
Accession Number
ADA558956

Entities

People

  • Igor V. Adamovich
  • Jonathan Poggie
  • Munetake Nishihara
  • Nicholas J. Bisek

Organizations

  • Air Force Research Laboratory

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force Research Laboratories
  • Boltzmann Equation
  • Charged Particles
  • Chemical Reactions
  • Electromagnetic Fields
  • Electrons
  • Energy
  • Energy Transfer
  • Glow Discharges
  • Heat Transfer
  • Hypervelocity Flow
  • Ionization
  • Lasers
  • Simulations
  • Space Charge
  • Voltage
  • Waveforms

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD)
  • Molecular Photonics/Laser Physics
  • Pulsed Power and Plasma Physics.

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics