A prototype of an electric-discharge gas flow oxygen−iodine laser: I. Modeling of the processes of singlet oxygen generation in a transverse cryogenic slab RF discharge
- Authors: Vagin N.P.1, Ionin A.A.1, Kochetov I.V.1,2, Napartovich A.P.1,2, Sinitsyn D.V.1, Yuryshev N.N.1
- 
							Affiliations: 
							- Lebedev Physical Institute
- Troitsk Institute for Innovation and Fusion Research
 
- Issue: Vol 43, No 3 (2017)
- Pages: 330-339
- Section: Laser Plasma
- URL: https://journal-vniispk.ru/1063-780X/article/view/186524
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063780X17030151
- ID: 186524
Cite item
Abstract
The existing kinetic model describing self-sustained and electroionization discharges in mixtures enriched with singlet oxygen has been modified to calculate the characteristics of a flow RF discharge in molecular oxygen and its mixtures with helium. The simulations were performed in the gas plug-flow approximation, i.e., the evolution of the plasma components during their motion along the channel was represented as their evolution in time. The calculations were carried out for the O2: He = 1: 0, 1: 1, 1: 2, and 1: 3 mixtures at an oxygen partial pressure of 7.5 Torr. It is shown that, under these conditions, volumetric gas heating in a discharge in pure molecular oxygen prevails over gas cooling via heat conduction even at an electrode temperature as low as ~100 K. When molecular oxygen is diluted with helium, the behavior of the gas temperature changes substantially: heat removal begins to prevail over volumetric gas heating, and the gas temperature at the outlet of the discharge zone drops to ~220–230 K at room gas temperature at the inlet, which is very important in the context of achieving the generation threshold in an electric-discharge oxygen−iodine laser based on a slab cryogenic RF discharge.
About the authors
N. P. Vagin
Lebedev Physical Institute
														Email: aion@sci.lebedev.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Moscow, 119991						
A. A. Ionin
Lebedev Physical Institute
							Author for correspondence.
							Email: aion@sci.lebedev.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Moscow, 119991						
I. V. Kochetov
Lebedev Physical Institute; Troitsk Institute for Innovation and Fusion Research
														Email: aion@sci.lebedev.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Moscow, 119991; Troitsk, Moscow, 142190						
A. P. Napartovich
Lebedev Physical Institute; Troitsk Institute for Innovation and Fusion Research
														Email: aion@sci.lebedev.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Moscow, 119991; Troitsk, Moscow, 142190						
D. V. Sinitsyn
Lebedev Physical Institute
														Email: aion@sci.lebedev.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Moscow, 119991						
N. N. Yuryshev
Lebedev Physical Institute
														Email: aion@sci.lebedev.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Moscow, 119991						
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