A computational study of steady and stagnating positive streamers in N2-O2 mixtures
Xiaoran Li, Baohong Guo, Anbang Sun, Ute Ebert, Jannis Teunissen

TL;DR
This study uses fluid modeling to analyze steady and decelerating positive streamers in air and N2-O2 mixtures, revealing that faster streamers can propagate in lower fields and challenging the concept of a unique stability field.
Contribution
It introduces a method to generate steady streamers with constant velocity, relates streamer properties to a characteristic time scale, and models streamer deceleration in low fields.
Findings
Faster streamers propagate in lower background fields.
Steady streamers are not fully stable and can accelerate or decelerate.
A phenomenological model describes streamer deceleration and length evolution.
Abstract
In this paper, we address two main topics: steady propagation fields for positive streamers in air and streamer deceleration in fields below the steady propagation field. We generate constant-velocity positive streamers in air with an axisymmetric fluid model, by initially adjusting the applied voltage based on the streamer velocity. After an initial transient, we observe steady propagation for velocities of m/s to m/s, during which streamer properties and the background field do not change. This propagation mode is not fully stable, in the sense that a small change in streamer properties or background field eventually leads to acceleration or deceleration. An important finding is that faster streamers are able to propagate in significantly lower background fields than slower ones, indicating that there is no unique stability field. We relate the streamer…
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