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Gas breakdown in the subnanosecond regime with voltages below 15 kV
15
Citations
7
References
2002
Year
Subnanosecond RegimeElectrical EngineeringPlasma ElectronicsEngineeringGaseous AmplificationHigh Voltage EngineeringPhysicsGas BreakdownApplied PhysicsTime-dependent Dielectric BreakdownMagnetohydrodynamicsPulse PowerGas Discharge PlasmaMicroelectronicsDelay TimeElectrical InsulationGaseous Breakdown
Gaseous breakdown in the subnanosecond regime is of interest for fast pulsed power switching, short pulse electromagnetics, and for plasma limiters to protect electronic devices from high power microwave radiation. Previous investigations of subnanosecond breakdown were mainly limited to high-pressure gases or liquids, with voltages in excess of 100 kV. In this paper, we investigate subnanosecond breakdown at applied voltages below 7.5 kV in point-plane geometries in argon, with a needle radius <0.5 /spl mu/m. The coaxial setup allows current and voltage measurements with temporal resolutions down to 80 ps. Voltages of 7.5 kV (which are doubled at the open gap before breakdown) produce breakdowns with a delay of about 1 ns. With negative pulses applied to the tip and the same amplitude, breakdown is always observed during the rising part of the pulse, with breakdown delay times below 800 ps, at pressures between 10/sup 2/ and 10/sup 4/ Pa. At lower pressure, a longer delay time (8 ns at 6 Pa) is observed. We expect the breakdown mechanism to be dominated by electron field emission, but still influenced by gaseous amplification.
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