Modelling of an Atmospheric–Pressure Air Glow Discharge Operating in High–Gas Temperature Regimes: The Role of the Associative Ionization Reactions Involving Excited Atoms.
Fecha
2020Autor
Cejas, Ezequiel
Prevosto, Leandro
Mancinelli, Beatriz
Metadatos
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A model of a stationary glow-type discharge in atmospheric-pressure air operated in
high-gas-temperature regimes (1000 K < Tg < 6000 K), with a focus on the role of associative ionization
reactions involving N(2D,2P)-excited atoms, is developed. Thermal dissociation of vibrationally
excited nitrogen molecules, as well as electronic excitation from all the vibrational levels of the
nitrogen molecules, is also accounted for. The calculations show that the near-threshold associative
ionization reaction, N(2D) + O(3P) → NO+ + e, is the major ionization mechanism in air at 2500 K < Tg
< 4500 K while the ionization of NO molecules by electron impact is the dominant mechanism at lower
gas temperatures and the high-threshold associative ionization reaction involving ground-state atoms
dominates at higher temperatures. The exoergic associative ionization reaction, N(2P) + O(3P) →
NO+ + e, also speeds up the ionization at the highest temperature values. The vibrational excitation
of the gas significantly accelerates the production of N2(A3P
u
+) molecules, which in turn increases
the densities of excited N(2D,2P) atoms. Because the electron energy required for the excitation of the
N2(A3P
u
+) state from N2(X1P
g
+, v) molecules (e.g., 6.2 eV for v = 0) is considerably lower than the
ionization energy (9.27 eV) of the NO molecules, the reduced electric field begins to noticeably fall at
Tg > 2500 K. The calculated plasma parameters agree with the available experimental data.
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