Electron and gas temperature-driven chemistry during microdischarges formed in water vapour bubbles
Florens Grimm, Jan-Luca Gembus, Jana Sch\"one, Peter Awakowicz, Lars Sch\"ucke, Andrew R. Gibson

TL;DR
This study develops a 0-D model informed by experiments to understand electron and gas temperature-driven chemistry in microdischarges within water vapor bubbles, revealing key reaction pathways and dissociation dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a new reaction scheme for microdischarges in water vapor, integrating high electron density and temperature effects, validated by experimental data.
Findings
High dissociation of H₂O during peak power density
Maximum ionization degree around 0.31%
Electron, ion, and neutral reactions with high threshold energies are significant
Abstract
Microdischarges formed in bubbles immersed in liquids are of interest for materials synthesis and chemical conversion applications in the frame of plasma-driven electrochemistry. A key challenge associated with controlling such processes is the limited understanding of the gas-phase chemical kinetics in these microdischarges. Due to their large electron densities, and high gas temperatures, both electron and gas temperature driven chemistry are likely to be important. Here, a 0-D modelling approach, informed by experimental measurements, is used to study the chemical kinetics in these systems. A new reaction scheme is developed for microdischarges in water vapour, including reactions for both high electron density, and high gas temperature regimes. Microdischarges formed during plasma electrolytic oxidation are used as a test case, however, the key results are expected to be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlasma Applications and Diagnostics · Plasma Diagnostics and Applications · Magnesium Alloys: Properties and Applications
