4.1. Sn ()
Ion distributions, such as the one shown in
Figure 1, were the initial basis for comparisons. To further examine the ionization bottleneck discrepancy, ion distribution curves were extended to higher temperatures (up to
eV), and the peak fractional populations were plotted against the number of electrons in the ionization stage for different methods, as summarized in
Table 1. These results are shown in
Figure 2. For the peak population plots, the standard method was plotted along with the standard method without
. In both plots of
Figure 2, the standard method with the
term is the solid line, and the standard method without the
term is the dashed line. These two cases utilize the NIST
s and the CT
s, as shown in
Figure 2a,b respectively. For each plot, the number of electrons remaining corresponding to noble gas configurations and configurations whose outermost subshell was a filled n
d subshell were marked as dashed vertical lines. The vertical lines show where ionization bottlenecks are expected to occur.
Using the standard CR model and NIST
s for Sn (solid line in
Figure 2a), a possible ionization bottleneck can be seen at the He-like configuration (Sn
), as the peak fractional population is much larger than the more highly charged configuration (Sn
) and slightly larger than the less charged configuration (Sn
). All further expected ionization bottlenecks are not observed. Instead the peak fractional population for the closed subshell configurations are either much lower than their neighbors, or the lower charged neighboring configuration (Z−1) exhibits an ionization bottleneck. The Ar-like configuration (Sn
) is an example of the former behaviour, with a dip, while the Ne-like, Ni-like, Kr-like, and Pd-like configurations (Sn
, Sn
, Sn
, and Sn
) are closer to the latter behaviour. Similarly, when the CT
s are used (solid line in
Figure 2b), there are dips at all of the expected ionization bottleneck locations, with only the Pd-like configuration having a significant bottleneck at a lower charged state. Removing
produces the expected ionization bottlenecks with the NIST
s but removes all features with the CT
s, as shown by the dashed lines in
Figure 2a,b respectively.
While rate coefficients plots were not shown by Colombant and Tonon, they were examined here, in an effort to interpret the unusual behaviour observed for the ionization bottlenecks. The results from Equations (
4), (
6), and (
8) were plotted for consecutive ion stages. The ground state and up to the sixth ion stage (Sn
) were chosen, because several changes in the outermost occupied subshell could be observed. As with the peak fractional population plots, the NIST and CT
s were used, with and without
.
Figure 3 shows these plots for the collisional ionization rate coefficient.
Curves for ion stages with the same outermost occupied subshell tended to group together for all of the rate coefficients. The rate equations given above indicate that the collisional ionization and three-body recombination rates decrease as ionization increases, while the radiative recombination rates would increase as ionization increased. However, as illustrated in
Figure 3, some curves of ion stages with the same outermost electron orbital cross. In particular, crossing can be observed in
Figure 3a,c between Sn
, Sn
, and Sn
. An important note here is that this crossing was not seen in the radiative recombination curves; and unlike the other two rates, the radiative recombination rate does not depend on the occupancy term (
). Again, the effect of removing this occupancy was investigated. For the NIST
s, the curve crossing observed before was no longer present in
Figure 3b. For the CT
s, removing
also removed the curve crossing. All rate coefficient plots followed the ionization orders seen before, but the ion stage curves were no longer clustered. Instead the first few curves corresponding to low ionization stages appeared to have larger differences than later stages, and the differences decreased in size as ionization increased. The rate coefficient differences themselves were small and gave some curves the appearance of equal spacing. This can be seen in
Figure 3d for neutral Sn to Sn
. This behaviour indicates that the occupancy term (
) may be associated with the appearance of ionization bottlenecks at unexpected charge states, evident in
Figure 1. This association is supported by further consideration of the three-body recombination rates, as shown in
Figure 4. The rates would be expected to decrease with charge state [
10], however the rate for Sn
is between that for Sn
and Sn
. When the occupancy (
) was removed, the exception evident in
Figure 4 using the standard method was no longer present.
One final consideration for Sn was the population behavior of ion stages with very few to no electrons remaining, which corresponds to the far right side of the plots in
Figure 2. Without the
correction to Equation (
5) and using the NIST
s, with or without the occupancy factor (
), the peak population of the final stage (Z = 50
) was smaller than the three preceding stages (Z = 49
, 48
, and 47
). It would be expected that at sufficiently high temperatures bare ions would be the dominate species in the plasma. When the
correction was used with the NIST
s, the final stage had a higher peak population than the three lower charged stages, as shown in
Figure 2a. In all cases using the CT
s, the peak population of the final stage exceeded those of the neighboring states. Nevertheless, the improved behavior of the model using the NIST
s, when
(rather than
) was used, supports the adoption of the standard (as opposed to the traditional) model used for most of the work described here.
4.2. Common Trends Observed across the Periodic Table
The Sn plots showed many of the common trends observed in the peak fractional population and rate coefficient plots obtained for other elements investigated using the NIST
s. In particular, the peak fractional population plots for other elements also exhibited ionization bottleneck discrepancies, peaks occurring before filled outermost subshell configurations or dips at these locations. For He-like and Ne-like configurations, these discrepancies were not seen throughout the elements examined. Instead, the expected ionization bottleneck was observed, with the peak population of these stages being greater than both of their neighbors. As atomic number increased though, the peak population of the preceding neighbor (Z−1) of the Ne-like ionization bottlenecks increased with respect to the bottleneck’s peak population. At Ru (
), the peak population before the Ne-like configuration exceeded the ionization bottleneck, leading to what is observed for Sn in
Figure 2a. While this trend was also seen for the He-like bottlenecks, for heavier elements the ion stages themselves went outside of the range of the plot, due to insufficient computing power and the need to maintain good resolution at lower temperatures. When the
term was removed, the peaks corresponding to ionization bottlenecks shifted to ion stages with full outermost orbitals.
The CT
s also produced discrepancies throughout the elements examined. However, there were more dips at the number of electrons for a full outermost orbital than observed using the NIST
s. This difference was often seen at lower numbers of electrons, namely He-like and Ne-like configurations. Removing
while using the CT
s did not produce expected ionization bottlenecks. Instead, the peaks and dips were flattened, as shown in
Figure 2b.
As with Sn, for the rate coefficient plots, generated using the NIST s, the curves tended to group according to their configurations’ outermost subshell. The rate coefficients also decreased or increased as ionization increased as described previously. In some cases the curves of ion stages with the same outermost electron orbital would cross, like with Sn; and no connection between the crossing point and the peak populations of the crossed curves could be found. As with Sn, in other cases one curve would not be in the ionization order for the three-body recombination plots. Again, no exceptions were observed in the radiative recombination curves. When the occupancy () was removed, the exceptions seen before using the standard method were no longer present, and the grouping of curves for the collisional ionization and three-body recombination curves became more distinct, as was observed for Sn.
In comparing the NIST and CT s, using the CT values produced the same discrepancies of crossing and out of order curves. The difference between the two methods was that the clustering of ionization stages based on the outermost electron orbital was diminished if not completely lost, when using the CT s. The observations for Sn, when was removed, was the common trend. The curves remained in the increasing ionization order, but were not clustered; and the difference between curves appeared to be slowly decreasing.
Heavier elements continued to show the previously described trends; however, once ground state configurations have electrons in the orbital (), additional complications arise. These complications are mainly seen in configurations where the now occupied orbital begins to be emptied and contraction becomes relevant.
4.3. Pb ()
To illustrate the difference in behavior between the lighter elements and the lanthindes or heavier elements,
Figure 5 shows peak fractional population plots for Pb, which has a ground state electronic configuration of
. Continuing to use the standard electron removal method, the peak corresponding to the ionization bottleneck for an outermost electron configuration of
should occur at Pb
(Er-like, 68 electrons). It is clear from
Figure 5a that using the standard CR model with NIST
s produced an ionization bottleneck at a charge state Pb
rather than Pb
. This discrepancy vanishes when the
is removed. However, the entire region between between the Pb
ion stage (Pd-like), which corresponds to a full outermost
subshell, and Pb
has no obvious ionization bottlenecks associated with the
,
, or
subshells. Using the occupancies (
), there is a dip at Pb
(Nd-like, 60 electrons) indicating a possible bottleneck, since this matches the discrepancies described previously for Sn and is observed for the Kr-like and Pd-like ion stages for Pb in
Figure 5a. This dip could correspond to a full outermost
subshell after the
and
electrons are removed. Furthermore for the CT
s, the dips observed at the expected bottlenecks are deeper than those observed for lighter elements. These additional observations from the Pb plots were common to period 6 elements with
(transition metals and heavier elements).
The lanthanides exhibited the same ionization bottleneck discrepancies described for lighter elements up to Pd-like configurations (46 electrons), as discussed for Pb. At ion stages with more electrons than the Pd-like peak population trends varied, being sensitive to the ordering of shells from which electrons are stripped. This variation was most likely due to
contraction [
21,
22], since the value of
was ambiguous as the outermost subshell was no longer easily determined [
22]. In other words, due to the contraction of the
orbital, ions with the same number of electrons as Xe are no longer likely to exhibit closed-shell behaviour as the ground state configuration corresponds to a mixture of open
and open 4
f shells. However, if the
term is removed this issue becomes moot.
4.4. Gd () Comparison
In order to further emphasize the importance of
and
, an attempt was made to reproduce an ion distribution plot for Gadolinium (
, [Xe]
) from another work [
8]. The exact distribution could not be reproduced, but the closest agreement was achieved using the NIST
s, with no
term, and without the
correction to the recombination term. As described above, the removal of the occupancy term automatically negates the need to consider
contraction and the ordering of shells. The resulting plot is shown in
Figure 6. In this plot ionization bottlenecks can be seen at Gd
, Gd
, and Gd
. Gd
corresponds to the removal of the
and
electrons, whilst Gd
corresponds to a full outermost
subshell with the electronic configuration [Kr]
[
22], so that these two are bottlenecks as expected. Gd
falls into the region where the ground configurations have both open
and open
shells [
22], where the ground state configuration is given as [Kr]
. This bottleneck could be attributed to the removal of all the
electrons, but it is important to keep in mind that the corresponding configurations for Gd
and Gd
are [Kr]
and [Kr]
respectively [
22]. It is noteworthy that the Gd
bottleneck is much less distinct than those for Gd
and Gd
, this being directly associated with the complex, mixed nature of the ground state configurations for ion stages in this range of charge states.
4.5. Overall Findings
The effect of the
term within Equation (
3) was investigated by comparing when the term was set to 1, effectively removing the term, and when the term was used normally. This effect was investigated using both the NIST
s and the CT
s. Using the NIST
s and removing
produced rate coefficient plots, ion distributions, and consequently peak fractional population plots that better supported the theory of ionization bottlenecks. In other words, given the current availability of accurate ionization energy data, which were not accessible when the CR model was developed [
5], it is now better to use actual ionization energies rather than to estimate them and subsequently correct for quantum effects with an occupancy factor. There is of course no physical justification for using the occupancy factor with the NIST
s.
was probably introduced in an attempt to mitigate against the continuous nature of the expression used for the ionization potentials (Equation (
7)) in the original CR model [
5].
Examining the results using the NIST
s, it was found that He-like and Ne-like configurations were clearly shown to be ionization bottlenecks, having peak populations greater than both the ion stage before (Z−1) and after (Z+1). However, ion stages corresponding to full outermost configurations with larger
n (e.g. Ar-like, Kr-like configurations) had peak populations lower than at least one neighbor, indicating no ionization bottleneck at the anticipated configuration. Removing
caused these ion stages to then become ionization bottlenecks.
Figure 2a. and the region below 60 electrons in
Figure 5a are some examples of this. Therefore, with the NIST
s, the
term seems to be the cause of the discrepancies between the charge states of observed and expected ionization bottleneck peaks.
These results suggest that the
term could have been an early correction factor to help account for the unrealistic smoothness of the estimated
s. Equation (
7) models processes that are quantum mechanical in nature; therefore, a term to account for an ion’s quantum state, (i.e., electronic configuration), could be needed. The introduction of such a term was discussed in the sources for Equation (
4) [
13,
29,
30]. However, the ion distributions for C and U (
) presented by Colombont and Tonon [
5] do not appear to have been made using the estimated
s with the occupancy factor, since the plots were not reproduced in the present study using these parameters. The C distribution is close to one that was generated using the NIST
s with no occupancy factor. This suggests that Colombont and Tonon [
5] may have used experimentally determined
s when they were available. This difference between the plots demonstrates the value of carefully considering what
s are used in plasma models. In addition to this, the removal of
, with the use of the CT estimated
s, demonstrates the importance of utilizing the correct
s, since under these conditions all bottleneck features are removed (as shown in
Figure 2b) instead of producing the expected ionization bottlenecks.
Furthermore, within the rate coefficient plots, for some elements an ion stage curve was out of the commonly observed ion stage order. By removing
this order discrepancy was also removed. Some ion stage curves would also cross others. No reason could be found for this sort of crossing to occur, and when
was removed the curve crossing was no longer observed. Additionally, ion stages began to group according to outermost electron orbital. An example of each of these trends is shown in
Figure 3a,b. Equations (
4), (
6), and (
8) indicate that without the
factor,
is the only other variable for a given temperature (
) within the rate coefficient equations and therefore the only influence on the ion stage distributions for a fixed
. The grouping of ion stages according to the outermost electronic orbital, which are observed when the NIST
s are used with no occupancy factor, makes sense as
most drastically changes between ion stages with different outermost subshells. These larger differences are in turn the reason for ionization bottlenecks [
25], and therefore the observed grouping of ion stages also supports the use of experimental
s, with no
term. This sole reliance of the rate equations, and thus the CR model, upon
underlines the benefit of using the real values of
, which are now available [
20].