On the physical origin of the nozzle characteristic and its connection with the double-arcing phenomenon in a cutting torch.
Fecha
2009Autor
Prevosto, Leandro
Kelly, Héctor
Mancinelli, Beatriz
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The nozzle current-voltage characteristic for a cutting arc is presented in this work. The
measurements are reported using a high energy density cutting arc torch with a nozzle bore radius
of 0.5 mm. The arc current was fixed at 30 A while the plenum pressure and the oxygen gas mass
flow rate were varied in the range of 0.55– 0.65 MPa and 0.32– 0.54 g s−1, respectively. The results
show a very low electron density and the lack of electron attachment at the plasma boundary layer.
No ion saturation current was found. For the smallest mass flow rate value gas breakdown was
found for a biasing nozzle potential close to that of the cathode, but no evidence of such breakdown
was found for the larger mass flow rate values. Using an expression for the ion speed at the entry
of the collisional sheath formed between the nonequilibrium plasma and the negatively biased
nozzle wall together with a generalized Saha equation coupled to the ion branch of the
characteristic, the radial profile of the electron temperature, the spatial distribution of the plasma
density at the plasma boundary, and the sheath thickness were obtained. In particular, the obtained
thickness value at the breakdown condition was in good agreement with that obtained from the
oxygen Paschen’s curve. An electron temperature of about 4700– 5700 K and a corresponding
plasma density of the order of 1019 – 1020 m−3 were found close to the nozzle wall. A physical
interpretation on the origin of the double-arcing phenomenon is presented, that explains why the
double-arcing (that it is established when the sheath breaks down) appears at low values of the gas
mass flow.
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