Nonlocal collisional electron transport in partially ionized plasma generation, structure, and stability
2016.04.18 12:17
장소 | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) |
---|---|
일시 | Apr. 19(Tue.), 2PM |
연사 | Prof. Mark Koepke, Department of Physics and Astronomy, West Virginia University, USA |
Nonlocal collisional electron transport in partially ionized plasma generation, structure, and stability
Apr. 19(Tue.), 2PM, #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.)
Prof. Mark Koepke, Department of Physics and Astronomy, West Virginia University, USA
The local plasma generation, structure, and stability at one location and time can be unexpectedly influenced by “nonlocal” electron transport and heating effects attributed to conditions, processes, and boundaries many energy-relaxation scale lengths away in another part of the plasma. Nonlocal effects are attributed to electric-field sampling by a traversing electron across disparate regional plasma conditions when the electron energy relaxation length is larger than or comparable to the scale length of plasma inhomogeneity. As a result, the entire electric-field profile, including sheaths, striations, and filamentation, rather than the local electric field strength, determines spatiotemporal electron current and heating, even in collisional plasma. Non-equilibrium, nonlocal properties make partially ionized plasma, which is strongly affected also by the presence of neutral species, a solid surface, particulates, or a liquid, a remarkable tool for manufacturing (of semiconductor chips, solar and plasma-display panels, and plasma sources for particle beams), for the treatment of organic and bio-objects/materials, and for nanotechnology. A promising approach for improved control of the local quantities plasma density, electron temperature, and electron and ion energy distribution functions (EEDF, IEDF) exploits the peculiarities of nonlocal effects on these characteristic plasma parameters. Nonlocal collisional electron transport effects are important for understanding and applying atmospheric-pressure plasma jets, micro-discharges, and low pressure plasma discharges not only to the pursuit of the discovery plasma frontier but also to technology used everyday.
댓글 0
번호 | 일시 | 장소 | 연사 | 제목 |
---|---|---|---|---|
공지 | 2019/09/18 - 12/5 | Seminar Room #1323 | Prof. David Schuster and etc. | Fall 2019: Physics Seminar Serises |
공지 | 2019/09/02 - 12/09 | Seminar Room 1501 | 이호성 박사 (한국표준과학연구원) and etc. | Fall 2019: Physics Colloquium |
49 | May 2 (Thu.), 4:00 PM | #1323, E6-2 | Prof. Joon Ik Jang |
Anomalous optical properties of halide perovskites
![]() |
48 | June 28 (Fri.), 13:30 PM | #1323, E6-2 | Dr. Yusuke Kozuka |
Magnetic domains and domain wall conduction in pyrochlore iridate thin films and heterostructures
![]() |
47 | July 9 (Mon.), 14:00 PM | #1323, E6-2 | Prof. Cesar A. Hidalgo, MediaLab, MIT |
The principles of collective learning
![]() |
46 | January 17 (Fri), 4:00 PM | #1323, E6-2 | Hiroki Ikegami |
Symmetry Breaking and Topology in Superfluid 3He
![]() |
» | Apr. 19(Tue.), 2PM | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Prof. Mark Koepke, Department of Physics and Astronomy, West Virginia University, USA | Nonlocal collisional electron transport in partially ionized plasma generation, structure, and stability |
44 | Jul. 28 (Thu.) 4PM | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Prof. Johannes Pollanen, Jerry Cowen Chair of Experimental Physics at Michigan State University | Low Dimensional Electrons: On the Road to Hybrid Quantum Systems |
43 | Jul. 08 (Fri.) 2PM | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Junhyun Lee, Harvard University | Electronic quasiparticles in the quantum dimer model |
42 | Jul. 08 (Fri.) 11:00 AM | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Michael Lawler(Binghampton Univ. / Cornell Univ.) | Isostatic magnetism |
41 | Dec. 8(Thu) 4p.m. | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Jinhyoung Lee, Hanyang University | Dynamical Resonance between Two Optical Cavities via Optomechanical Oscillator |
40 | Nov. 29(Tue) 4p.m. | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. SungBin Lee, KAIST | Symmetry Protected Kondo Metals and Their Phase Transitions |
39 | Mar. 2nd (Thu), 4:00 p.m | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Jonathan Denlinger, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab | “Progress in the comparison of ARPES to DMFT for d and f strongly correlated electron systems” |
38 | Nov. 16 (Wed), 4p.m. | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Heung-Sik Kim , University of Toronto | Realizing Haldane Model in Fe-based Honeycomb Ferromagnetic Insulators |
37 | Dec. 9(Fri), 1:30 p.m. | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Jae Yoon Cho, POSTECH | Entanglement area law in strongly-correlated systems |
36 | Nov. 24(Thu) 4p.m. | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Jai-Min Choi, Chonbuk National Univiersity | Harmonic oscillator physics with single atoms in a state-selective optical potential |
35 | Nov. 11th(Fri), 1:30 p.m. | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Keun Su Kim, POSTECH | Bandgap Engineering of Black Phosphorus |
34 | Nov. 11th (Fri), 4 p.m. | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Bohm-Jung Yang, SNU | Dirac fermions in condensed matters |
33 | Feb. 1 (Wed.), 2p.m. | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Michihisa Yamamoto, Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo | Quantum electron optics using flying electrons |
32 | Jul. 07 (Thu.) 2PM | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Eun Ah Kim, CORNELL UNIV. | Let there be topological superconductors |
31 | Dec. 9(Fri), 4p.m. | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl. | Dr. Kun Woo Kim, KIAS | Shift Charge and Spin Photocurrents in Dirac Surface States of Topological Insulator |