File(s) under embargo
Reason: The contents from this dissertation are being prepared for publication.
4
month(s)20
day(s)until file(s) become available
Ultrafast Emission Spectroscopy and Nonlinear Laser Diagnostics for Nanosecond Pulsed Plasmas
In recent years, nanosecond repetitively pulsed (NRP) plasma discharges have garnered significant interest due to their rapid generation of reactive excited-state species, reactive radicals, and localized heat release within nanosecond (ns) timescale. To effectively harness these plasmas for altering system-level thermal and chemical behavior, a thorough understanding of their governing physics is crucial. This knowledge enables the development of predictive plasma kinetic models for tailoring NRP plasmas to specific applications. However, achieving this requires high-fidelity experimental data to validate models and deepen our understanding of fundamental plasma physics. Advancing experimental spectroscopy and laser diagnostics methods is essential for probing such temporally highly dynamic and optically complex nonequilibrium environments. This includes developing novel test platforms, conducting fundamental research to address existing knowledge gaps, and constructing custom ultrafast laser architectures for probing plasma properties.
The pioneering development of Streak-based test platform in the diagnostics field of nanosecond pulsed plasmas and its successful application towards inferring the underlying ultrafast spatio-temporal evolution of nanosecond pulsed plasma discharges with an unprecedented time-resolution as short as ~25 ps is presented for the first time. Spectrally filtered, 1D line-imaging of nanosecond pulsed plasma discharges in a single-shot, jitter-free, continuously sweeping manner is obtained, and differences in discharge dynamics of air and N2 plasma environments are studied. Successive test platform advancement includes spectrally resolved Streak-spectroscopy measurements of thermal regime-transition evolution from early-nonequilibrium to local-thermal-equilibrium (LTE) to attain time-resolved quantitative insights into N2(C) state rotational/vibrational nonequilibrium temperatures, electron temperature/density, and spectral lifetime dynamics.
Ultrafast laser-based progression includes detailed fundamental investigation of higher-order optical nonlinearity perturbations of fs-EFISH by considering of – self-phase modulation induced spectral characteristic of fs-EFISH signal, calibration mapping during-below-and-beyond optical breakdown regime, optical Kerr effect consequences, impact of femtosecond (fs) laser seeding on the noninvasiveness of fs-EFISH, and spectral emission characteristics of fs laser filaments. To infer N2(X) state nonequilibrium of NRP pulsed plasmas, two hybrid fs/ps ro-vibrational coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) ultrafast laser architectures are developed. First architecture, single-laser-solution, reduces system’s energy budget by ~3 mJ/pulse for generating narrowband (~21 ps), high-energy (~420 μJ/pulse), 532 nm probe pulses through incorporation of custom built visible fs optical parametric amplifier (OPA) coupled with an Nd:YAG power amplifier module. The second architecture, two-laser-solution, improves system’s robustness through the development of a 1 kHz, 532 nm, high-energy (~600 μJ/pulse), low-jitter (<1 ps), narrowband (~27 ps), master-oscillator-power-amplification (MOPA) based picosecond probe pulse laser time-synchronized with fs master-oscillator. Single-shot, hybrid fs/ps narrowband ro-vibrational CARS demonstration in a combusting flame up to temperatures of ~2400 K is demonstrated. Experimental ro-vibrational CARS investigation includes polarization based nonresonant background suppression and demonstration of preferential Raman coherence excitation shift, a temperature sensitivity enhancing strategy for vibrationally hot mediums like nanosecond pulsed plasmas. Lastly, an ultrafast pulse-friendly optically accessible vacuum cell is designed and fabricated for controlled experiments of NRP fs/ps CARS. Special care is taken to prevent self-focusing and spectral-temporal chirp of fs CARS beams while maintaining Gaussian focusing beam caustic.
Funding
Multi-Stage Evolution of Nanosecond Pulsed Plasmas at High Pressures - High-Resolution Measurements and Modeling
Office of Fusion Energy Sciences
Find out more...History
Degree Type
- Doctor of Philosophy
Department
- Mechanical Engineering
Campus location
- West Lafayette