Influence of applied voltage and electrical conductivity on underwater pin-to-pin pulsed discharge
Catherine Rond (LSPM), Jean-Michel Desse (DAAA, ONERA (F- 59014 Lille, - France)), Nicolas Fagnon (LSPM), Xavier Aubert (LSPM), Arlette Vega (LSPM),, Xavier Duten (LSPM)

TL;DR
This study investigates how water conductivity and applied voltage influence underwater pin-to-pin pulsed discharges, revealing different discharge regimes and breakdown behaviors through combined optical and electrical diagnostics.
Contribution
It provides new insights into discharge initiation and propagation mechanisms in water, especially how parameters affect regime transitions and breakdown phenomena.
Findings
Low conductivity shows cathode and anode discharge regimes.
Higher voltage increases breakdown likelihood and regime complexity.
At high conductivity, mixed discharge regimes are observed.
Abstract
A parametric study of an underwater pulsed plasma discharge in pin-to-pin electrode configuration has been performed. The influence of two parameters has been reported, the water conductivity (from 50 to 500 S/cm) and the applied voltage (from 6 to 16 kV). Two complementary diagnostics, time resolved refractive index-based techniques and electrical measurements have been performed in order to study the discharge propagation and breakdown phenomena in water according to the two parameters. A single high voltage of duration between 100 S and 1 ms is applied between two 100 m diameter platinum tips separated by 2 mm and immersed in the aqueous solution. This work, which provides valuable complementary results of paper [1], is of great interest to better understand the mechanisms of initiation and propagation of pin-to-pin discharge in water. For low conductivity (from 50 to…
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