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Article

Enhancement of Radio Frequency Plasma Plume by Pulsed Plasma Bullet at Atmospheric Pressure

1
College of Science, Donghua University, Shanghai 201620, China
2
Textiles Key Laboratory for Advanced Plasma Technology and Application, Donghua University, Shanghai 201620, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Appl. Sci. 2022, 12(11), 5430; https://doi.org/10.3390/app12115430
Submission received: 25 March 2022 / Revised: 13 May 2022 / Accepted: 24 May 2022 / Published: 27 May 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Plasma Technology and Its Applications)

Abstract

:
An experimental study of a plasma plume generated by radio frequency atmospheric pressure glow discharge and enhanced in terms of plume length and intensity by pulsed discharge is presented. When injecting a pulsed plasma bullet into the radio frequency plasma plume, the length of the plasma plume into ambient air can be elongated from 2 mm to 6 mm and the intensity of the plasma plume can be elevated by four times. The propagation of the pulsed plasma bullet and the interaction with radio frequency discharge and plume are demonstrated by the temporal evolution of the discharge spatial appearance. The enhanced plasma plume is employed to improve the O/C ratio of carbon fiber, which is attributed to the synergistic effect of the radio frequency plasma plume and pulsed plasma bullet.

1. Introduction

The atmospheric pressure glow discharge (APGD) plasma plume driven by a radio frequency (RF) excitation has become one of the most popular topics in non-thermal plasmas due to their low and controllable gas temperature, high stability, and high concentrations of chemically reactive species [1,2]. These advantages of the RF plasma plume indicate its potential wide employment in surface modification [3], biomedical processing [4], and the deposition of functional films [5]. The capability of delivering reactive plasma species is dependent on the length of the RF plasma plume, which is normally suggested to be elongated by increasing the gas flow rate and excitation voltage. Unfortunately, the consumption of working gas and power limits the application scope of the RF plasma plume [6]. Given that the energetic electrons generated by pulsed plasma could enhance the discharge intensity of RF discharges [7,8,9,10], a combined electrode configuration is proposed to generate a cascade discharge with pulsed discharge and RF discharge, in which a pulsed plasma bullet is injected into the RF discharge to enhance the RF plasma plume in terms of plume length and intensity. The temporal evolution of the discharge spatial profile of the pulsed discharge and RF discharge are experimentally investigated to demonstrate the dynamics of the discharges. This cascade plasma plume is used to treat a carbon fiber surface [11,12]. The treatment mechanism is discussed with the optical emission intensities at the nozzle.

2. Experiments

The combined discharge device consisted of a quartz tube with an inner diameter of 2 mm and three wrapped copper sheet electrodes with a width of 5 mm, as shown in Figure 1a, in which the middle electrode is grounded. The left electrode was connected to a 5 kHz high-voltage pulse, which was generated by a pulse generator (DEI PVX-4110, U.S.) powered by a DC high-voltage generator (SPELLMAN SL1200, U.S.). The right electrode was connected to a 13.56 MHz excitation generated by an RF power supply (AE Cesar1320, U.S.). The pulse discharge gap and RF discharge gap were fixed at 25.0 mm and 7.0 mm, respectively. The tube was fed with helium (99.999%) at a flow rate of 2.0 SLM at 760 Torr. Pulse generator and ICCD camera (Andori-Star DH734, U.K.) were synchronously triggered by a function generator (Tektronix AFG 3102, U.S.). Voltage and current waveforms were measured by using two voltage probes (Tektronix P6015A, U.S.) and one current probe (Pearson 2877, U.S.), which were shown and recorded by an oscilloscope (Tektronix TDE 3034C, U.S.). The bandpass filters (Thorlabs FB710-10 and FB780-10, U.S.) were placed ahead of the ICCD lens to obtain the temporal behaviors of optical emission intensities around 706 nm and 777 nm, respectively.

3. Results

3.1. Cascade Discharge

It is shown in Figure 1a that the pulsed discharge is generated between the pulse electrode and ground electrode in terms of a travelling plasma bullet and the RF discharge is ignited between the RF electrode and ground electrode. At the exit of the tube, the plasma plume can be attributed to both the RF discharge and pulsed discharge, which will be characterized by the spatio-temporal evolution of the discharge. The waveform of the pulse voltage, as shown in Figure 1(b1), has the amplitude of 5.2 kV and duration of 1.4 μs with the duty cycle of 0.7%. The waveform of the RF voltage with the amplitude of 1.0 kV is shown in Figure 1(b2). In the experiments, the duty cycle of the pulse voltage was changed to manipulate the length of the pulsed discharge while keeping other discharge parameters unchanged. Figure 1(b3) gives the waveform of the total discharge current collected from the ground electrode, which includes the pulsed discharge current and RF discharge current. There are two current peaks with amplitudes of 1.5 A and 1.6 A at the time instants of 0.24 μs and 1.64 μs, respectively, which correspond to the rising phase and falling phase of the pulse voltage, as shown in Figure 1(b1). By subtracting the stable operation of the RF discharge current with the amplitude of 0.5 A from the total discharge current, the pulsed discharge current can be obtained, with two current peaks with amplitudes of 1.1 A and 1.2 A, as shown in Figure 1(b4), which is consistent with that in the dielectric barrier pulsed discharge [8].
To demonstrate the enhancement of the pulsed discharge on the RF discharge and plasma plume, the pulsed discharge was manipulated to propagate into the pulsed discharge region, RF discharge region, and plasma plume region, by changing the duty cycle of the pulse voltage, as shown in Figure 2(a1–c1), respectively. With a duty cycle of 0.3%, corresponding to the pulse voltage duration of 0.6 μs, as shown in Figure 2(a1), the pulse discharge does not reach the ground electrode, and the plasma plume with the length of 2.0 mm can be attributed mostly to the RF discharge. The temporal evolution of discharges is presented in Figure 2(a2) with the time resolution of 10 ns, which is the exposure time of the ICCD camera and the time interval between two consecutive discharge images. The dashed lines in the figure indicate the position of the electrodes and the nozzle of the tube. The pulsed discharge can be recognized as a travelling plasma bullet, which is ignited near the pulsed electrode and reaches the position of 20 mm with the time interval of 0.6 μs [13]. The RF discharge and plasma plume keep their spatial profile and intensity within 4.0 μs of the ignition of the pulsed discharge, which suggests that the operation of the RF discharge is independent of the pulsed discharge. It is worth noting that the image intensities of the pulsed discharge and plasma plume are reduced and elevated by 10 times, respectively, for better demonstration, as indicated in Figure 2(a2).
With the duty cycle of 0.7%, corresponding to the pulse voltage duration of 1.4 μs, as shown in Figure 2(b1), the pulsed discharge reaches the ground electrode. It also shows that the intensity of the plasma plume is enhanced in terms of plume length growing to 4.0 mm. Figure 2(b2) gives the temporal evolution of discharge, which demonstrates the interaction between the pulsed plasma bullet with RF discharge. The plasma bullet generated in the pulsed discharge region enters into the RF discharge region at the time instant of 1.2 μs and leaves the RF electrode at the time instant of 1.7 μs. With the propagation of the plasma bullet in the RF discharge region, the intensity of the RF discharge is enhanced from the ground electrode to the RF electrode and maintains a time delay. At the time instant of 2.0 μs, the intensity of the plasma plume outside of the tube nozzle grows due to the enhancement of the RF discharge by the pulsed discharge. When increasing the duty cycle to 1.2% with the pulse voltage duration of 2.4 μs, as shown in Figure 2(c1), the pulsed plasma bullet passes through the RF discharge region and moves out of the tube. The plasma plume is composed of the pulsed plasma bullet and RF discharge plume, which can be recognized by the discharge temporal evolution, as shown in Figure 2(c2) [14]. The RF discharge is enhanced with the passage of the pulsed plasma bullet, which is consistent with the result shown in Figure 2(b2), except for the interference by the pulsed discharge at the time instant of 2.6 μs, corresponding to the falling phase of the pulse voltage. The intensity of the plasma bullet is reduced by 10 times in the plasma plume region outside of the tube, which shows the propagation of the plasma bullet with the length of 14 mm. The intensity of the RF discharge plume is elevated by two times to distinguish from the pulsed plasma bullet, which also shows the intensification of the RF discharge plume with the enhancement of the RF discharge. The length of the RF discharge plume is estimated to be 6.0 mm.
The discharge maximum image intensities at each time instant in the regimes of pulsed discharge, RF discharge, and plasma plume are presented in Figure 3 as a function of the duration of the voltage pulse. In the regime of the pulsed discharge, the discharge image intensity grows from 58 to 860 when increasing the duty cycle from 0.4 μs to 1.0 μs, which corresponds to the growth of the pulsed plasma bullet from ignition in the vicinity of the pulsed electrode until reaching the ground electrode. As the duty cycle further increases to 2.4 μs, the pulsed plasma bullet travels through the regime of pulsed discharge, and the discharge image intensity changes slowly to 1000. In the regime of RF discharge, before the duty cycle reaches below 1 μs, the discharge image intensity maintains a low magnitude of around 23, which is elevated with the injection of the pulsed plasma bullet and reaches the magnitude of 47 at the duty cycle of 1.4 μs. It is proposed that the enhancement in the RF discharge image intensity by two times can be attributed to the injection of the pulsed plasma bullet. With the duty cycle increasing to 2.4 μs, the discharge image intensity reaches 65, which is more than one order of magnitude lower than that of the pulsed discharge. In the regime of the plasma plume, the discharge image intensity is as low as 4, which is much lower than that of the pulsed plasma bullet and can be distinguished from the pulsed plasma bullet. With the enhancement in the RF discharge, the discharge image intensity is elevated to 7 at the duty cycle of 1.4 μs, which is further elevated to 23 at the duty cycle of 2.4 μs with the assistance of the pulsed plasma bullet. This suggests that the intensified RF discharge and plasma plume can be achieved with the propagation of the pulsed plasma bullet through the RF discharge regime and plasma plume regime.
Figure 4 shows the spatio-temporal evolution of the plasma plume with a pulse duty cycle of 1.2% and duration of 2.4 μs at the nozzle. The exposure time was set to 20 ns for pulsed discharge and 500 ns for RF discharge during the experiment. The vertical dashed line in the figure indicates the position of the nozzle of the discharge tube. It is divided into three time domains for better demonstration: the stable RF discharge plume (−20~0 μs), the pulsed plasma bullet passing through the RF plume (0~4 μs), and the RF plume affected by the plasma bullet (4~60 μs). The stable RF discharge plume has a low plasma intensity and the plume length is approximately 2 mm. The image of the pulsed plasma bullet passing through the RF discharge plume is shown in Figure 2(c2). The length of the RF discharge plume increases to 6 mm with the injection of the pulsed plasma bullet. After the pulsed plasma bullet passes through the RF discharge plume, the influence of pulsed discharge on the RF discharge plume gradually decreases, and the intensity of the RF discharge plume gradually decreases. The inserted images show the plasma plumes with the accumulation of image intensity between −12 μs and −8 μs, between 0 μs and 3 μs, and between 8 μs and 12 μs, respectively. The length of the RF discharge plume increases from 2 mm to 6 mm. It is demonstrated that the intensity and length of the RF discharge plume increase with the injection of pulsed plasma bullets, and this enhancement can last tens of microseconds after the pulsed plasma bullet has been extinguished.

3.2. Carbon Fiber Treatment

The enhancement of the RF discharge plume can also be demonstrated by the optical emission intensities at the nozzle in Figure 4. The behaviors of the optical emission intensities of 706 and 777 nm at the nozzle are further shown in Figure 5. The optical emission line at 706 nm is attributed to the transition of He (33S1→23P0,1,2); it is agreed that the intensity of the optical emission line at 706 nm is an indication of the presence of electrons with energies above 2.9 eV. The optical emission line at 777 nm is attributed to the transition of O (3s5S0→3p5P). It can be found that when the pulse duration is below 1.2 μs, the intensity of high-energy electrons at the nozzle is proposed to be extremely low. When the pulse duration is greater than 1.2 μs, the pulsed plasma bullet reaches the outside of the tube and the optical emission intensity at 706 nm increases from 15 to 85. Meanwhile, the optical emission intensity at 777 nm increases from 42 to 57, which indicates that the injection of the pulsed plasma bullet results in the enhancement in the RF discharge plume.
Atmospheric pressure plasmas have been used for the etching and modification of carbon fibers (CFs) in the ambient air condition, and it is agreed that the surface modification is caused by the chemical reactions of oxygen-containing reactive species with the CFs. It has been proven that the amount of active oxygen in the RF discharge plume with the injection of the pulsed plasma bullet is elevated by 36%, as shown in Figure 5. These reactive O atoms are believed to play an important role in the surface etching and modification of CFs [15]. XPS was used to study the chemical composition of CFs before and after cascade plasma plume treatment. The surfaces of CFs mainly contain three types of atoms: C, O, and N. The relative content of each atom is shown in Figure 6a. The C, O, and N atoms of the untreated CFs are 85.18%, 11.92%, and 2.90%, respectively. After plasma treatment under different pulse durations for 24 s, the oxygen concentration on the surface increased, while the carbon concentration decreased. As the pulse duration increases from 0.6 μs to 2.4 μs, the carbon concentration on the carbon fiber surface decreases from 84.03% to 78.80%, the oxygen concentration increases from 12.98% to 17.92%, and the O1s/C1s ratio grows from 13.99% to 22.74%, respectively. Both the increments in the oxygen concentration and the O1s/C1s ratio indicate that plasma treatment introduces extra oxygen-containing polar groups on the surfaces of CFs. For comparison, a pulsed discharge jet with the pulse duration of 2.4 μs was used to treat the CFs. Although the pulse discharge can also elevate the O1s/C1s ratio of the CF surface, the effect is not as strong as that of the cascade plasma plume. To further investigate the chemical changes of the CF surfaces induced by the cascade plasma plume, deconvolution analyses of the C1s peaks were performed. According to previous reports [16], four peaks (C-C (284.6 eV), C-O-C (285.9 eV), C=O (287.1 eV), and COOH or COOR (288.5 eV)) can be deconvoluted from the C1s spectra. Figure 6b gives the curve fitting results of the C1s envelope. It shows that the peak area of COOH or COOR components increased significantly with cascade plasma plume treatment at the pulse duration of 0.6 μs and 1.2 μs. The peak area of C-O and COOH or COOR components is dominated at the pulse duration of 2.4 μs. On the other hand, it is found that the component peak area of the C-O increased significantly when treated by the pulsed discharge jet, which contains travelling plasma bullets. This suggests that the introduction of oxygen-containing polar groups on the CF surface differs from the pulsed discharge jet and the RF discharge plume. The RF discharge plume improves COOH or COOR oxygen-containing polar groups, and the pulse discharge jet mainly increases the density of C-O single bonds on the CF surface. This suggests that with the cascade plasma treatment with both plasma bullets generated by the pulsed discharge and RF discharge plume, more oxygen-containing polar groups are introduced onto the surfaces of CFs.

4. Conclusions

In summary, the atmospheric cascade plasma plume was developed experimentally, in which the pulsed discharge jet in terms of a travelling plasma bullet was manipulated to interact with RF discharge to enhance the RF discharge plume in terms of the length and intensity of the plasma plume. Through the spatio-temporal evolution of the discharge at the nozzle of the discharge tube, it was demonstrated that the length of the RF discharge plume is elongated from 2 mm to 6 mm and the intensity of the RF plasma plume is enhanced by four times in terms of image intensity and optical emission line intensity, which can be maintained for tens of microseconds. The cascade plasma plume was employed to treat the surfaces of carbon fibers, in which the C-O single bond and carboxyl bond on the surface of the carbon fiber were significantly improved.

Author Contributions

Q.H.: Conceptualization, Methodology, Formal analysis, Investigation, Writing—original draft. Y.G.: Supervision, Investigation, Writing—review and editing. Y.Z.: Investigation, Writing—review. J.Z.: Investigation. J.S.: Supervision, Conceptualization, Investigation, Writing—review and editing. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work was funded by the Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 11875104 and 12175036).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. (a) Schematic of experimental setup and waveforms of (b1) pulsed voltage, (b2) RF voltage, (b3) total discharge current, and (b4) pulse discharge current.
Figure 1. (a) Schematic of experimental setup and waveforms of (b1) pulsed voltage, (b2) RF voltage, (b3) total discharge current, and (b4) pulse discharge current.
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Figure 2. Discharge appearance of pulsed discharge, RF discharge, and plasma plume with the pulsed voltage duration of (a1) 0.6 μs, (b1) 1.4 μs, and (c1) 2.4 μs, and corresponding temporal evolution of discharge spatial profiles as shown in (a2c2).
Figure 2. Discharge appearance of pulsed discharge, RF discharge, and plasma plume with the pulsed voltage duration of (a1) 0.6 μs, (b1) 1.4 μs, and (c1) 2.4 μs, and corresponding temporal evolution of discharge spatial profiles as shown in (a2c2).
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Figure 3. Time-dependent discharge image intensity of pulsed discharge, RF discharge, and plasma plume with duration of voltage pulse.
Figure 3. Time-dependent discharge image intensity of pulsed discharge, RF discharge, and plasma plume with duration of voltage pulse.
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Figure 4. Temporal evolution of discharge spatial profile with the pulse duty cycle of 1.2% at the nozzle. Microsecond images of RF discharge are shown in the insert.
Figure 4. Temporal evolution of discharge spatial profile with the pulse duty cycle of 1.2% at the nozzle. Microsecond images of RF discharge are shown in the insert.
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Figure 5. Temporal behaviors of optical emission intensities of He: 706 nm and O: 777 nm as a function of duration of voltage pulse.
Figure 5. Temporal behaviors of optical emission intensities of He: 706 nm and O: 777 nm as a function of duration of voltage pulse.
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Figure 6. (a) Surface element analysis of untreated and different plasma-treated carbon fibers; (b) relative areas (%) of peaks obtained from the deconvolution of C1s peaks.
Figure 6. (a) Surface element analysis of untreated and different plasma-treated carbon fibers; (b) relative areas (%) of peaks obtained from the deconvolution of C1s peaks.
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MDPI and ACS Style

Han, Q.; Guo, Y.; Zhang, Y.; Zhang, J.; Shi, J. Enhancement of Radio Frequency Plasma Plume by Pulsed Plasma Bullet at Atmospheric Pressure. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 5430. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12115430

AMA Style

Han Q, Guo Y, Zhang Y, Zhang J, Shi J. Enhancement of Radio Frequency Plasma Plume by Pulsed Plasma Bullet at Atmospheric Pressure. Applied Sciences. 2022; 12(11):5430. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12115430

Chicago/Turabian Style

Han, Qianhan, Ying Guo, Yarong Zhang, Jing Zhang, and Jianjun Shi. 2022. "Enhancement of Radio Frequency Plasma Plume by Pulsed Plasma Bullet at Atmospheric Pressure" Applied Sciences 12, no. 11: 5430. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12115430

APA Style

Han, Q., Guo, Y., Zhang, Y., Zhang, J., & Shi, J. (2022). Enhancement of Radio Frequency Plasma Plume by Pulsed Plasma Bullet at Atmospheric Pressure. Applied Sciences, 12(11), 5430. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12115430

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