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High-speed dual Langmuir probe

Publication ,  Journal Article
Lobbia, RB; Gallimore, AD
Published in: Review of Scientific Instruments
July 1, 2010

In an effort to temporally resolve the electron density, electron temperature, and plasma potential for turbulent plasma discharges, a unique high-speed dual Langmuir probe (HDLP) has been developed. A traditional single Langmuir probe of cylindrical geometry (exposed to the plasma) is swept simultaneously with a nearby capacitance and noise compensating null probe (fully insulated from the plasma) to enable bias sweep rates on a microsecond timescale. Traditional thin-sheath Langmuir probe theory is applied for interpretation of the collected probe data. Data at a sweep rate of 100 kHz are presented; however the developed system is capable of running at 1 MHz-near the upper limit of the applied electrostatic Langmuir probe theory for the investigated plasma conditions. Large sets (100 000 sweeps at each of 352 spatial locations) of contiguous turbulent plasma properties are collected using simple electronics for probe bias driving and current measurement attaining 80 dB signal-to-noise measurements with dc to 1 MHz bandwidth. Near- and far-field plume measurements with the HDLP system are performed downstream from a modern Hall effect thruster where the time-averaged plasma properties exhibit the approximate ranges: electron density ne from (1× 10 15) - (5× 1016) m-3, electron temperature T e from 1 to 3.5 eV, and plasma potential Vp from 5 to 15 V. The thruster discharge of 200 V (constant anode potential) and 2 A (average discharge current) displays strong, 2.2 A peak-to-peak, current oscillations at 19 kHz, characteristic of the thruster "breathing mode" ionization instability. Large amplitude discharge current fluctuations are typical for most Hall thrusters, yet the HDLP system reveals the presence of the same 19 kHz fluctuations in ne (t), Te (t), and Vp (t) throughout the entire plume with peak-to-peak divided by mean plasma properties that average 94%. The propagation delays between the discharge current fluctuations and the corresponding plasma density fluctuations agree well with expected ion transit-times observed with distinct plasma waves traveling away from the thruster at velocities 10 km/s. © 2010 American Institute of Physics.

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Published In

Review of Scientific Instruments

DOI

ISSN

0034-6748

Publication Date

July 1, 2010

Volume

81

Issue

7

Related Subject Headings

  • Applied Physics
  • 51 Physical sciences
  • 40 Engineering
  • 34 Chemical sciences
  • 09 Engineering
  • 03 Chemical Sciences
  • 02 Physical Sciences
 

Citation

APA
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MLA
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Lobbia, R. B., & Gallimore, A. D. (2010). High-speed dual Langmuir probe. Review of Scientific Instruments, 81(7). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3455201
Lobbia, R. B., and A. D. Gallimore. “High-speed dual Langmuir probe.” Review of Scientific Instruments 81, no. 7 (July 1, 2010). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3455201.
Lobbia RB, Gallimore AD. High-speed dual Langmuir probe. Review of Scientific Instruments. 2010 Jul 1;81(7).
Lobbia, R. B., and A. D. Gallimore. “High-speed dual Langmuir probe.” Review of Scientific Instruments, vol. 81, no. 7, July 2010. Scopus, doi:10.1063/1.3455201.
Lobbia RB, Gallimore AD. High-speed dual Langmuir probe. Review of Scientific Instruments. 2010 Jul 1;81(7).

Published In

Review of Scientific Instruments

DOI

ISSN

0034-6748

Publication Date

July 1, 2010

Volume

81

Issue

7

Related Subject Headings

  • Applied Physics
  • 51 Physical sciences
  • 40 Engineering
  • 34 Chemical sciences
  • 09 Engineering
  • 03 Chemical Sciences
  • 02 Physical Sciences