TY - JOUR
T1 - Three-dimensional first principles simulation of a hydrogen discharge
AU - Chew, Junxian
AU - Gibbon, Paul
AU - Brömmel, Dirk
AU - Wauters, Tom
AU - Gribov, Yuri
AU - De Vries, Peter
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2021/4
Y1 - 2021/4
N2 - Townsend discharge theory is commonly used to describe and approximate the ionisation fraction growth rate in the very early phase of plasma initiation in tokamak devices via ohmic breakdown. The prediction of the ionisation fraction growth rate is done most commonly with continuum or kinetic models, which in turn boil down to the relation between the first Townsend's coefficient α, pressure p and electric field strength E (namely, α/p and E/p). To date there are few computational models that attempt to simulate the ionisation fraction growth rate via explicit modelling of each ionisation event through electron-neutral collisions. This is largely due to the challenge of addressing the exponential growth of charged particles from ionisation processes, combined with the high computational cost of N-body simulation. In this work, a new fully three-dimensional, first-principles model of a Townsend hydrogen discharge is demonstrated and benchmarked against prior experimental findings. These tests also include comparisons of three separate models for the scattering angle and their impact on the obtained α/p and mean electron drift velocity. It is found that isotropic scattering combined with restricting the freed electron's scattering angle along the incident electron's velocity vector during ionisation events gives the closest agreement of α/p compared to experimental measurements.
AB - Townsend discharge theory is commonly used to describe and approximate the ionisation fraction growth rate in the very early phase of plasma initiation in tokamak devices via ohmic breakdown. The prediction of the ionisation fraction growth rate is done most commonly with continuum or kinetic models, which in turn boil down to the relation between the first Townsend's coefficient α, pressure p and electric field strength E (namely, α/p and E/p). To date there are few computational models that attempt to simulate the ionisation fraction growth rate via explicit modelling of each ionisation event through electron-neutral collisions. This is largely due to the challenge of addressing the exponential growth of charged particles from ionisation processes, combined with the high computational cost of N-body simulation. In this work, a new fully three-dimensional, first-principles model of a Townsend hydrogen discharge is demonstrated and benchmarked against prior experimental findings. These tests also include comparisons of three separate models for the scattering angle and their impact on the obtained α/p and mean electron drift velocity. It is found that isotropic scattering combined with restricting the freed electron's scattering angle along the incident electron's velocity vector during ionisation events gives the closest agreement of α/p compared to experimental measurements.
KW - Monte Carlo simulation
KW - Townsend discharge
KW - scattering angle models
KW - tree code method
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85101845805
U2 - 10.1088/1361-6587/abdd75
DO - 10.1088/1361-6587/abdd75
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85101845805
SN - 0741-3335
VL - 63
JO - Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
JF - Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
IS - 4
M1 - 045012
ER -