Driving frequency effect on discharge parameters and higher harmonic generation in capacitive discharges at constant power densities
Sarveshwar Sharma, Nishant Sirse, Animesh Kuley, Abhijit Sen, Miles, M Turner

TL;DR
This study uses PIC simulations to analyze how driving frequency influences discharge parameters and harmonic generation in constant power capacitive discharges, revealing frequency-dependent transitions in plasma characteristics.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the frequency effects on plasma parameters and harmonic generation under constant power conditions, which are relevant for industrial plasma processing.
Findings
Discharge voltage decreases with increasing frequency before transition.
Electron density decreases and temperature increases before the transition frequency.
EEDF shape changes from bi-Maxwellian to Maxwellian and back with frequency.
Abstract
Very high frequency (VHF) driven capacitive discharges are now being increasingly adopted for plasma-based materials processing due to their high processing rates and lower substrate damage. Past studies related to complex plasma dynamics and higher harmonics generation in such systems were limited to constant voltage/current conditions, whereas, industrial systems are mostly driven by constant power density sources. In the present study, using particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation, we explore the dynamics of collisionless symmetric capacitive discharges that is operated at constant power densities. Our focus is on the effect of the driving frequency on the discharge parameters like the electron density/temperature, the electron energy distribution function (EEDF), the ion energy distribution function (IEDF), and the generation of higher harmonics in the device. The simulations are…
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