TY - GEN
T1 - Characterization of intermediate reactions following femtosecond laser excitation in argon-nitrogen mixtures
AU - Zhang, Yibin
AU - Shneider, Mikhail N.
AU - Miles, Richard B.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Argon gas is demonstrated to enhance Femtosecond Laser Electronic Excitation Tagging at atmospheric pressure and temperature for unseeded velocimetry applications, primarily through ≈ 4 orders of magnitude increase of excited species that may radiate through nitrogen’s second positive system at early timescales of interest. The first positive system continues to play an important role in maintaining this emission at longer delays. A detailed kinetic model is implemented to explain this observed behavior in nitrogen and argon mixtures. Dominant processes governing the creation of N2(B3Πg) and N2(C3Πu) include a slower decay of electron temperature through increased ionization processes, reduced nitrogen quenching of electrons, nitrogen atom creation and recombination, the formation and dissociation of N4+,and a number of argon-nitrogen direct and indirect excitation pathways. The production of ArN+ ions through charge-transfer reactions Ar + N2+→ ArN++ N and Ar + N2+→ ArN+ + N affect excited C-and B-state nitrogen population delays at later times (t > 100ns). The pooling reactions N2(A3Σ + u) + N2(A3Σ + u) → N2(B3Πg), N2(C3Πu) N2+play minor roles in the formation of N2(B3Πg) and N2(C3Πu) at timescales useful for measurements in the FLEET-argon plasma chemistry. Metastable argon species are less instrumental in direct nitrogen excitation transfer, Ar* (43P2) + N2→ Ar + N2(B3Πg), N2(C3Πu),than in facilitating further reactions through maintaining a higher electron temperature. The model is verified with sub-100 Torr argon-nitrogen discharge experiments and theoretical results derived from other studies. It is concluded that not one single process can be credited for the enhancement, but a combination of ionization and heating that produces the increased emission observed in argon mixtures.
AB - Argon gas is demonstrated to enhance Femtosecond Laser Electronic Excitation Tagging at atmospheric pressure and temperature for unseeded velocimetry applications, primarily through ≈ 4 orders of magnitude increase of excited species that may radiate through nitrogen’s second positive system at early timescales of interest. The first positive system continues to play an important role in maintaining this emission at longer delays. A detailed kinetic model is implemented to explain this observed behavior in nitrogen and argon mixtures. Dominant processes governing the creation of N2(B3Πg) and N2(C3Πu) include a slower decay of electron temperature through increased ionization processes, reduced nitrogen quenching of electrons, nitrogen atom creation and recombination, the formation and dissociation of N4+,and a number of argon-nitrogen direct and indirect excitation pathways. The production of ArN+ ions through charge-transfer reactions Ar + N2+→ ArN++ N and Ar + N2+→ ArN+ + N affect excited C-and B-state nitrogen population delays at later times (t > 100ns). The pooling reactions N2(A3Σ + u) + N2(A3Σ + u) → N2(B3Πg), N2(C3Πu) N2+play minor roles in the formation of N2(B3Πg) and N2(C3Πu) at timescales useful for measurements in the FLEET-argon plasma chemistry. Metastable argon species are less instrumental in direct nitrogen excitation transfer, Ar* (43P2) + N2→ Ar + N2(B3Πg), N2(C3Πu),than in facilitating further reactions through maintaining a higher electron temperature. The model is verified with sub-100 Torr argon-nitrogen discharge experiments and theoretical results derived from other studies. It is concluded that not one single process can be credited for the enhancement, but a combination of ionization and heating that produces the increased emission observed in argon mixtures.
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U2 - 10.2514/6.2017-0841
DO - 10.2514/6.2017-0841
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85017234808
T3 - AIAA SciTech Forum - 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting
BT - AIAA SciTech Forum - 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting
PB - American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Inc.
T2 - 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting
Y2 - 9 January 2017 through 13 January 2017
ER -