Ion heating in the PISCES-RF liquid-cooled high-power, steady-state, helicon plasma device
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-2021
Publication Title
Plasma Sources Science and Technology
Abstract
Radio frequency (RF) driven helicon plasma sources are commonly used for their ability to produce high-density argon plasmas (n > 1019 m-3) at relatively moderate powers (typical RF power < 2 kW). Typical electron temperatures are <10 eV and typical ion temperatures are <0.6 eV. A newly designed helicon antenna assembly (with concentric, double-layered, fully liquid-cooled RF-transparent windows) operates in steady-state at RF powers up to 10 kW. We report on the dependence of argon plasma density, electron temperature and ion temperature on RF power. At 10 kW, ion temperatures >2 eV in argon plasmas are measured with laser induced fluorescence, which is consistent with a simple volume averaged 0D power balance model. 1D Monte Carlo simulations of the neutral density profile for these plasma conditions show strong neutral depletion near the core and predict neutral temperatures well above room temperatures. The plasmas created in this high-power helicon source (when light ions are employed) are ideally suited for fusion divertor plasma-material interaction studies and negative ion production for neutral beams.
Department
Mathematics
Volume Number
30
Issue Number
6
DOI
10.1088/1361-6595/abff10
Recommended Citation
Thakur, S. Chakraborty; Paul, M.; Hollmann, E. M.; Lister, E.; Scime, E. E.; Sadhu, S.; Steinberger, T. E.; and Tynan, G. R., "Ion heating in the PISCES-RF liquid-cooled high-power, steady-state, helicon plasma device" (2021). Faculty and Staff Works. 583.
https://kb.gcsu.edu/fac-staff/583