Theory of the Electron Sheath and Presheath
Brett Scheiner, Scott D. Baalrud, Benjamin T. Yee, Matthew M. Hopkins,, Edward V. Barnat

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive theory and model for electron sheaths and presheaths, revealing their extended nature and the role of pressure gradients and flows, supported by PIC simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a 1D model for electron sheaths and presheaths that accounts for pressure-driven flows and extends understanding beyond traditional assumptions.
Findings
Electron presheaths extend much further than ion presheaths.
Pressure gradients accelerate electrons to super-thermal speeds.
Ion acoustic waves are excited by electron-ion flow differences.
Abstract
Electron sheaths are commonly found near Langmuir probes collecting the electron saturation current. The common assumption is that the probe collects the random flux of electrons incident on the sheath, which tacitly implies that there is no electron presheath and that the flux collected is due to a velocity space truncation of the electron velocity distribution function (EVDF). This work provides a dedicated theory of electron sheaths, which suggests that they are not so simple. Motivated by EVDFs observed in Particle-In-Cell (PIC) simulations, a 1D model for the electron sheath and presheath is developed. In the model, under low temperature plasma conditions (), an electron pressure gradient accelerates electrons in the presheath to a flow velocity that exceeds the electron thermal speed at the sheath edge. This pressure gradient generates large flow velocities compared to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlasma Diagnostics and Applications · Laser-induced spectroscopy and plasma · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
