Publication detail

Optical Emission Spectroscopy of Abnormal Glow Discharge in Nitrogen-Methane Mixtures at Atmospheric Pressure

KRČMA, F. KLOHNOVÁ, K. POLÁCHOVÁ, L. HORVÁTH, G.

Original Title

Optical Emission Spectroscopy of Abnormal Glow Discharge in Nitrogen-Methane Mixtures at Atmospheric Pressure

Type

journal article - other

Language

English

Original Abstract

The abnormal glow discharge was studied in electrode configuration corresponding to gliding arc arrangement with interelectrode gap of 2 mm at the discharge power up to 300 W in nitrogen-methane mixtures (0.5-2.5 % of methane) at atmospheric pressure. Both gases had purity better than 99.999 % and the whole system was evacuated before measurement to suppress oxygen traces. Optical emission spectra were taken in dependence on applied power and gas mixture composition. Nitrogen and CN radical spectra as well as atomic lines of hydrogen and carbon were identified. The vibrational temperatures of 2300-8000 K were determined from the spectra of nitrogen second positive, CN violet and C2 spectral systems. Rotational temperature calculated from nitrogen second positive and CN violet 0-0 bands varied in the interval of 1200-4800 K depending on the experimental conditions.

Keywords

Abnormal atmospheric pressure glow discharge, nitrogen-methane mixture, optical emission spectroscopy, plasma temperatures

Authors

KRČMA, F.; KLOHNOVÁ, K.; POLÁCHOVÁ, L.; HORVÁTH, G.

RIV year

2010

Released

30. 7. 2010

ISBN

0373-3742

Periodical

Publications of the Astronomical Observatory of Belgrade

Year of study

89

Number

1

Pages from

371

Pages to

374

Pages count

4

BibTex

@article{BUT50751,
  author="František {Krčma} and Karolína {Klohnová} and Lucie {Töröková} and Gabriel {Horváth}",
  title="Optical Emission Spectroscopy of Abnormal Glow Discharge in Nitrogen-Methane Mixtures at Atmospheric Pressure",
  journal="Publications of the Astronomical Observatory of Belgrade",
  year="2010",
  volume="89",
  number="1",
  pages="371--374",
  issn="0373-3742"
}