Title: H. C. Kim, Y. Chen, and J. P. Verboncoeur
1CCP 2006
(S05-I22 Invited Talk)
- Modeling of RF Window Breakdown
- Transition of window breakdown
- from vacuum multipactor discharge
- to rf plasma
2006. 08. 29
H. C. Kim, Y. Chen, and J. P. Verboncoeur Dept.
of Nuclear Engineering, UC Berkeley
2Topic 0.
- 0. Introduction and Models
- I. Vacuum Multipactor Discharge
- II. Transition to RF Plasma
3Undesirable Discharge in HPMs
(High-Power Microwave)
Conductor
RF Window (Dielectric)
RF generator (e.g. Magnetrons, Linear beam
tubes, Gyrotrons, Free-Electron Lasers, and so on)
Either Vacuum or Background Gas
Incoming EM wave
Outgoing EM wave
gt
z direction of wave propagation
- Discharge can degrade device performance or even
damage devices, including catastrophic window
failure.
4In Vacuum (Multipactor Discharge)
(TE or TEM mode)
- Single-surface multipactor on a dielectric
- Multipactor discharge is an avalanche caused by
secondary electron emission.
Vacuum
-
-
leads to electron energy gain.
-
( life time)
-
-
(maximum distance)
makes electrons return to the surface.
Observed in various systems (e.g. RF windows,
accelerator structures, microwave tubes and
devices, and rf satellite payloads)
5 Analytic Solution of Single Particle Motion
- Solution of the equation of motion for the
electron in Vacuum
(TE or TEM mode)
For the constant Ez Ez0 during the flight,
vx,0, vy,0 initial velocity of the electron
emitted from the surface ?0 initial phase of the
rf electric field at that time (tt0)
-
-
- The z- and y-components of the impact electron
energy
6With Background Gas (RF Plasma)
- Under the high-pressure background gas, an rf
plasma is formed. - The rf plasma is a candidate for window
breakdown on the air side.
-
-
-
-
-
7Discharge Sustainment
- Electron generation mechanisms in the system
- Secondary Electron Emission (SEE) on a surface
- originated from electron impact to a material
- Dominant in Vacuum or under the low-pressure
gas
probabilistic event
-
-
-
- Ionization in the volume
- originated from ionization collisions between
electrons and the background gas - dominant under the high-pressure gas
probabilistic event
-
-
-
- Another emission mechanisms thermionic
emission, photo emission, field emission,
explosive emission, and so on.
8 Secondary Emission due to Electron Impact
- Energy and angular dependence of secondary
emission yield - (the ratio of the incident flux to the emission
flux)
-
i,
i,
(Electron Impact Energy)
Ref Vaughan et al, IEEE (1989) IEEE (1993)
? (Electron Impact Angle)
9 1D3V Particle-In-Cell (PIC) Model
x
- Condition of
- left dielectric
-
y
-
-
-
Dielectric
Dielectric (d0)
-
-
-
-
-
L
- Simulation Tool
- Modified XPDP1 from PTSG, UC Berkeley
- Ref J.P. Verboncoeur et al., J. Comput. Phys.
104, 321 (1993)
10Topic I.
- 0. Introduction and Models
- I. Vacuum Multipactor Discharge
- II. Transition to RF Plasma
Our model is based on electrostatic fields and
the magnetic field is not taken into account.
11 Dynamics using Monte-Carlo Simulation
- Susceptibility Curve for Plane Wave
Discharge on (Positive growth rate)
- Discharge off low ? due to
- Too high impact energy
- Too small impact energy
Problem No oscillation appears even though
Ref Ang et al, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. 26,
290 (1998)
12Model of Monte-Carlo Simulation
- Emission of initial seed electrons from the
surface
vz,0, vy,0 Maxwellian distribution ? Uniform
distribution
? Calculate the impact energy and angle (from
analytic solution of one particle motion) ?
Calculate the secondary electron yield (from
model of SEC due to electron impact)
- Ejection of multiple secondary electrons (Nn1)
from the surface
vz,0, vy,0 (from the energy distribution of
secondary electrons) ? The phase of next
injection is taken from the phase of impact for
the parent electron.
Ref Ang et al, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. 26,
290 (1998)
13 Dynamics using PIC Simulation
(solving field eqn. self-consistently)
- PIC simulation shows that the electron number
and the Ez oscillate at twice the rf frequency,
saturating after 1 ns. - Ez oscillates in and out of the susceptibility
region.
Ref H.C. Kim and J.P. Verboncoeur, Phys.
Plasmas 12, 123504 (2005)
Plane Wave
14PIC Susceptibility Curve (Plane vs. TE10)
- Effect of transverse field structure
Plane wave
TE10 mode
x 1.5
TE10 mode
z direction of wave propagation
- In TE10 mode, the upper boundary of the
susceptibility diagram is nearly vertical so that
only the lower boundary is relevant.
15Summary for Topic I
- In HPM systems, the time-dependent physics of
the single-surface multipactor has been
investigated by using PIC simulation. - ? The normal surface field and number of
electrons oscillate at twice the rf frequency. - The effect of the transverse field structure on
the discharge has been investigated. - ? In TE10, the upper boundary of the
susceptibility diagram is nearly vertical so that
only the lower boundary is relevant.
16Topic II.
- 0. Introduction and Models
- I. Vacuum Multipactor Discharge
- II. Transition to RF Plasma
17Collision with Argon Background Gas
- The argon gas is used in this study because of
its simplicity in the chemistry (compared with
air).
- Electron-Neutral Collision
18PIC Number of Particles (I)
- Vacuum multipactor discharge
- The secondary electron emission is the only
mechanism for generating electrons.
- The number of electrons still oscillates as in
the vacuum case but increases slowly in time, as
a result of electron-impact ionization.
of ions of ionization events between
electrons and argon gas
19PIC Number of Particles (II)
- The numbers of electrons and ions are nearly the
same and increase abruptly in time. - Collisional ionization becomes the dominant
mechanism to generate electrons.
20PIC Electron Mean Energy
- Electrons in the multipactor discharge gain
their energy by being accelerated from the rf
electric field during the transit time.
- At high pressures, electrons suffer lots of
collisions and lose the significant amount of
energy gained from the rf electric field.
21PIC Electron Energy Distribution
Spatially averaged
- Below 50 Torr, the EEPF is bi-Maxwellian type.
- At high pressures, the EEPF becomes Druyvesteyn
type since the electron temperature decreases
with the collision frequency.
22PIC Electron and Ion Densities
- At low pressures, the multipactor discharge is
formed near the dielectric window. - At intermediate pressures, both multipactor
discharge and rf plasma exist. - At high pressures, only rf plasma is formed,
away from the surface of the window.
Time-averaged over a cycle
23PIC Electric Field Profile
- At low and intermediate pressures, the electric
field is positive on the surface, indicating that
the multipactor discharge can be sustained. - At high pressures, the electric field is
negative on the surface. The energy of electrons
impacting the surface is low enough so that the
secondary electron emission yield is less than
0.5.
24PIC Secondary Electron Emission
- Secondary electron emission yield on the
dielectric
Transition Pressure (1050 Torr)
EEPF of rf plasma is Druyvesteyn.
surface discharge is collisionless.
- Below 10 Torr, the secondary yield is near unity
so that multipactor discharge can be sustained. - As the pressure increases, collisions suppress
the impact energy and hence the secondary
electron yield ? decreases to less than unity.
For particles accumulated over a cycle
25Experiment for the Breakdown on the Air Side
- The HPM surface flashover experiments at Texas
Tech Univ.
Incident P
Transmitted P
Reflected P
Absorbed P Incident P Transmitted P
Reflected P
Flashover delay time
Ref G. Edmiston, J. Krile, A. Neuber, J.
Dickens, and H. Krompholz, High Power Microwave
Surface Flashover of a Gas-Dielectric Interface
at 90 to 760 Torr, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. (to
be published).
26Experiment for the Breakdown on the Air Side
Air 90 760 Torr
3 MW, UV
3 MW
4.5 MW
f 2.85 GHz
Simple theory L. Gould and L. W. Roberts, J.
Appl. Phys. 27, 1162 (1956).
- is universal for
different Erf0 at the given pressure range.
27PIC Discharge Formation Time (I)
- Simulation results of argon gas for various
E-fields and frequencies
- is universal for
different Erf0 and ?.
28PIC Discharge Formation Time (II)
- Simulation results of argon gas for various
E-fields and frequencies
? ns
- is universal for different Erf0
and ?.
29Summary for Topic II
- In HPM systems, adding an argon background gas,
we have investigated the transition of window
breakdown from single-surface vacuum multipactor
discharge to rf plasma. - There is an intermediate pressure regime where
both multipactor discharge and rf plasma exist. - In our parameter regime, the transition pressure
(? less than unity) is between 10 and 50 Torr in
argon. - The discharge formation time (?) has been
obtained as a function of the gas pressure. - The normalization
predicted by the simple theory holds only at very
high pressures. - At low pressures, the discharge formation time
is independent of Erf0 and ?.
30Conference on Computational Physics 2006
Thank you for your attention.
This work was supported in part by AFOSR
Cathodes and Breakdown MURI04 grant
FA9550-04-1-0369, AFOSR STTR Phase II contract
FA9550-04-C-0069, and the Air Force Research
Laboratory - Kirtland.
31(No Transcript)
32 MC E-Field Trace
- The normal electric field and the number of
electrons oscillate with time only for Case 1 in
the MC model.
33 MC versus PIC Results
Case 1
- Like the PIC simulation result, the oscillation
period in our MC simulation is half the rf
period. - However there is still a significant discrepancy
in amplitude and phase between the MC and PIC
results, which comes from the assumptions on
which the MC simulation is based.
34 MC versus PIC Results
- The parameter regime where the multipactor
discharge develops is also the narrower in the MC
simulation than in the PIC simulation.
35PIC Power Trace
Case 1
36PIC Power Trace
0.5
2
Case 2
Case 1
- In vacuum multipactor discharge, the rf phase
randomization of electrons occurs only upon the
collision with the surface. - The phase delay of the discharge power with
respect to - the input power comes from the finite transit
time for electrons to interact with the surface.
It means that the electrons are not totally in
equilibrium with the local rf electric field. - As the transit time is larger (or the electric
field is smaller), the phase difference is
larger.
5
37PIC Scaling with Erf0/frf
Grow
Decay
Cases 1 and 4
Cases 2 and 3
- The shape of the closed curve of the trajectory
depends on the amplitude of the rf electric field
normalized to the rf frequency (Erf0/frf).
38PIC Spatial Distribution of Electrons in TE10
X (um)
X (um)
At the beginning
At transient
Time
Z (um)
Z (um)
Weak
Time
Strong
X (um)
At the steady state
Weak
Z (um)
39 Explanation of Spatial Distribution in TE10
Center
Discharge on (Positive growth rate)
Periphery
At transient
At steady state
40Experiment for the Breakdown on the Air Side
- The HPM surface flashover experiments at Texas
Tech Univ.
- WR284 S-Band waveguide
- 7.21 cm X 3.40 cm
- (A 24.5 cm2)
(Air)
Ref G. Edmiston, J. Krile, A. Neuber, J.
Dickens, and H. Krompholz, High Power Microwave
Surface Flashover of a Gas-Dielectric Interface
at 90 to 760 Torr, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. (to
be published).
41PIC Discharge Formation Time
Assuming
- Discharge formation time ?
g effective volume ionization rate obtained
by fitting the number trace
t0 determined from the time that mean kinetic
energy reaches steady state, assuming g also
reaches steady state.
42Comparison
- Flashover time Experiment
- at Texas Tech Univ. (Air)
- Discharge formation time PIC (Argon)
3 MW, UV
3 MW
4.5 MW
- Since the statistical delay time is not
considered in the simulation and the background
gas is different, there is an order of magnitude
difference in time between experiment and
simulation. - But, the qualitative trends are similar.
43PIC2nd Order Method for Particle Collection
- The velocity and position at time the particle
crosses the boundary
Velocity
tn1/2
tn1
Ref H.C. Kim, Y. Feng, and J.P. Verboncoeur,
Algorithms for collection, injection, and
loading in particle simulations , J. Comput.
Phys. (to be published)
tn
Position
44PIC 2nd Order Method for Particle Ejection
Velocity
tn-1/2
tn
tn-1
Position