Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1690561 | Vacuum | 2006 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
The density of neutral oxygen atoms in a post-glow reactor was measured with a fibre-optics catalytic probe. The source of O atoms was a microwave discharge generated in Ar-O2 gas with different flow rates up to 3000Â sccm/min. The O density was measured at different power of the microwave generator between 40 and 160Â W and different effective pumping speed between 7 and 28Â m3/h. It was found to depend on the ratio between O2 and Ar flow rates. At a constant O2 flow of 200Â sccm/min there was a broad maximum of O density between the Ar flow of 200 and 1000Â sccm/min, independent of the effective pumping speed. At a constant O2 and Ar flow rates of 200 and 1000Â sccm/min, respectively, the O density was found to increase both with increasing power and increasing effective pumping speed. The results were explained with collision phenomena in ionized gases and heterogeneous recombination of O atoms on surfaces.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Surfaces, Coatings and Films
Authors
UroÅ¡ Cvelbar, Miran MozetiÄ, DuÅ¡an BabiÄ, Igor Poberaj, Andre Ricard,