Investigation of the significance of excited species in wave-heated dense non-ideal microplasmas using particle-in-cell Monte Carlo-collision modeling

AIP ADVANCES(2023)

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Abstract
A computational model for the interaction of a high-pressure microplasma with an electromagnetic wave is presented. A one-dimensional particle-in-cell Monte Carlo collision model is used to investigate the plasma non-ideality effects in a second-stage laser-heated xenon plasma with a comprehensive chemistry mechanism, including excited species. A xenon microplasma at a temperature of 300 K and pressure of 10 bar becomes non-ideal after the laser heating stage with lower ionization and electronic excitation barriers, which makes the presence of excited species important to the plasma generation process. For these conditions, two-step ionization via excited species becomes a major contributor to plasma ionization. We find that full ionization of the plasma is obtained in similar to 2 ps when excited species are included in the chemistry model, as opposed to similar to 2.5 ps for a chemistry mechanism that does not consider their effect. With excited species, the ionization mode transitions from direct ionization via electron-neutral collisions to direct and stepwise ionization as the plasma generation progresses.
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Key words
wave-heated,non-ideal,particle-in-cell,carlo-collision
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