Experimental study of atmospheric pressure single-pulse nanosecond discharge in pin-to-pin configuration
Xingxing Wang, Adam Patel, Sally Bane, Alexey Shashurin

TL;DR
This experimental study investigates nanosecond atmospheric pressure discharges in a pin-to-pin setup, measuring various plasma parameters and analyzing discharge regimes, secondary breakdown, and electron dynamics with multiple advanced diagnostics.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed experimental data on nanosecond discharges, including measurements of plasma parameters and insights into secondary breakdown and discharge transition mechanisms.
Findings
Spark regime observed for gaps < 6 mm with specific energy thresholds.
Higher electron densities and temperatures for smaller gaps and larger pulse energies.
Discharge energy mainly deposited before secondary breakdown, with electron density decay governed by recombination.
Abstract
In this work, we present an experimental study of nanosecond high-voltage discharges in a pin-to-pin electrode configuration at atmospheric conditions operating in single-pulse mode (no memory effects). Various discharge parameters, including voltage, current, gas density, rotational/vibrational/gas temperature, and electron number density, were measured. Several different measurement techniques were used, including microwave Rayleigh scattering, laser Rayleigh scattering, optical emission spectroscopy enhanced with a nanosecond probing pulse, fast photography, and electrical parameter measurements. Spark and corona discharge regimes were studied with discharge pulse duration of 90 ns and electrode gap sizes ranging from 2 to 10 mm. The spark regime was observed for gaps < 6 mm using discharge pulse energies of 0.6-1 mJ per mm of the gap length. Higher electron number densities, total…
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