TY - JOUR
T1 - Experimental benchmark of kinetic simulations of capacitively coupled plasmas in molecular gases
AU - Donkó, Z.
AU - Derzsi, A.
AU - Korolov, I.
AU - Hartmann, P.
AU - Brandt, S.
AU - Schulze, J.
AU - Berger, B.
AU - Koepke, M.
AU - Bruneau, B.
AU - Johnson, E.
AU - Lafleur, T.
AU - Booth, J. P.
AU - Gibson, A. R.
AU - O'Connell, D.
AU - Gans, T.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2018/1/1
Y1 - 2018/1/1
N2 - We discuss the origin of uncertainties in the results of numerical simulations of low-temperature plasma sources, focusing on capacitively coupled plasmas. These sources can be operated in various gases/gas mixtures, over a wide domain of excitation frequency, voltage, and gas pressure. At low pressures, the non-equilibrium character of the charged particle transport prevails and particle-based simulations become the primary tools for their numerical description. The particle-in-cell method, complemented with Monte Carlo type description of collision processes, is a well-established approach for this purpose. Codes based on this technique have been developed by several authors/groups, and have been benchmarked with each other in some cases. Such benchmarking demonstrates the correctness of the codes, but the underlying physical model remains unvalidated. This is a key point, as this model should ideally account for all important plasma chemical reactions as well as for the plasma-surface interaction via including specific surface reaction coefficients (electron yields, sticking coefficients, etc). In order to test the models rigorously, comparison with experimental 'benchmark data' is necessary. Examples will be given regarding the studies of electron power absorption modes in O2, and CF4-Ar discharges, as well as on the effect of modifications of the parameters of certain elementary processes on the computed discharge characteristics in O2 capacitively coupled plasmas.
AB - We discuss the origin of uncertainties in the results of numerical simulations of low-temperature plasma sources, focusing on capacitively coupled plasmas. These sources can be operated in various gases/gas mixtures, over a wide domain of excitation frequency, voltage, and gas pressure. At low pressures, the non-equilibrium character of the charged particle transport prevails and particle-based simulations become the primary tools for their numerical description. The particle-in-cell method, complemented with Monte Carlo type description of collision processes, is a well-established approach for this purpose. Codes based on this technique have been developed by several authors/groups, and have been benchmarked with each other in some cases. Such benchmarking demonstrates the correctness of the codes, but the underlying physical model remains unvalidated. This is a key point, as this model should ideally account for all important plasma chemical reactions as well as for the plasma-surface interaction via including specific surface reaction coefficients (electron yields, sticking coefficients, etc). In order to test the models rigorously, comparison with experimental 'benchmark data' is necessary. Examples will be given regarding the studies of electron power absorption modes in O2, and CF4-Ar discharges, as well as on the effect of modifications of the parameters of certain elementary processes on the computed discharge characteristics in O2 capacitively coupled plasmas.
KW - capacitively coupled plasmas
KW - electrical discharge processes
KW - particle simulation
U2 - 10.1088/1361-6587/aa8378
DO - 10.1088/1361-6587/aa8378
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85038414284
SN - 0741-3335
VL - 60
JO - Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
JF - Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
IS - 1
M1 - 014010
ER -