[1] During the EXL98 aircraft mission, sprites and blue jets were observed by narrow band cameras that measure the N 2 + 1NG (0,1) band at 4278Å and the N 2 2PG (0, 0) band at 3370Å . We discuss the observations ($1 km resolution), instrumental and atmospheric corrections, and altitude profiles of ionized (1NG) and neutral (2PG) emission observed during a specific sprite. The ratio of ionized-to-neutral emission indicates a relative enhancement of ion emission below 55 km. Characteristic electron energies (E Ch ) and electric fields (E ) are derived from these emission ratios using excitation rates computed from a model that solves the Boltzmann equation as a function of electric field. Up to 55km E follows the breakdown field (E k ) and E Ch is $2.2eV. Above 55 km E drops below E k and E Ch drops to $1.75eV near 60km.
Polystyrene (PS) surfaces were treated by electron-beam-generated plasmas in argon/oxygen, argon/nitrogen, and argon/sulfur hexafluoride environments. The resulting modifications of the polymer surface energy, morphology, and chemical composition were analyzed by a suite of complementary analytical techniques: contact angle goniometry, atomic force microscopy (AFM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and reflection electron energy loss spectroscopy (REELS). The plasma treatments produced only minimal increases in the surface roughness while introducing the expected chemical modifications: oxygen-based after Ar/O(2) plasma, oxygen- and nitrogen-based after Ar/N(2) plasma, and fluorine-based after Ar/SF(6) plasma. Fluorinated PS surfaces became hydrophobic and did not significantly change their properties over time. In contrast, polymer treated in Ar/O(2) and Ar/N(2) plasmas initially became hydrophilic but underwent hydrophobic recovery after 28 days of aging. The aromatic carbon chemistry in the top 1 nm of these aged surfaces clearly indicated that the hydrophobic recovery was produced by reorientation/diffusion of undamaged aromatic polymer fragments from the bulk rather than by contamination. Nondestructive depth profiles of aged plasma-treated PS films were reconstructed from parallel angle-resolved XPS (ARXPS) measurements using a maximum-entropy algorithm. The salient features of reconstructed profiles were confirmed by sputter profiles obtained with 200 eV Ar ions. Both types of depth profiles showed that the electron-beam-generated plasma modifications are confined to the topmost 3-4 nm of the polymer surface, while valence band measurements and unsaturated carbon signatures in ARXPS and REELS data indicated that much of the PS structure was preserved below 9 nm.
The Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) has developed a processing system based on an electron beam-generated plasma. Unlike conventional discharges produced by electric fields (DC, RF, microwave, etc.), ionization is driven by a high-energy (∼ few keV) electron beam, an approach that can be attractive to atomic layer processing applications. In particular, high electron densities (10 10 -10 11 cm −3 ) can be produced in electron beam generated plasmas, where the electron temperature remains between 0.3 and 1.0 eV. Accordingly, a large flux of ions can be delivered to substrate surfaces with kinetic energies in the range of 1 to 5 eV. This provides the potential for controllably etching and/or engineering both the surface morphology and chemistry with monolayer precision. This work describes the electron beam driven plasma processing system, with particular attention paid to system characteristics and the ability to control the generation and delivery of ions to the surface and their energies. Electron beam generated plasmas are produced by injecting a highenergy electron beam into a gas background, which will ionize, dissociate, and excite atoms or molecules as it traverses the gas volume. While the basic inelastic processes that lead to species production are the same as those in discharge plasmas, the use of energetic electron beams to drive production results in plasmas that have very different properties than conventional discharges. Some of these properties are attractive for plasma-based atomic layer processing applications where, whether etching, depositing, or chemically modifying materials, fine control over the flux and energy of ions is needed. In the case of atomic layer etching, perhaps the single most important need is to tightly control the kinetic energy of ions incident to the processing surface so as to avoid damage while maintaining a reasonable etch rate. [1][2][3] In this regard, a significant advantage of beam-driven plasmas is the inherently low electron temperature T e , which is typically a fraction of an eV in most gas mixtures of technological interest. Importantly, this is true regardless of the plasma density. Thus, one can produce a large fluence of reactive ion and neutral species where the kinetic energy of the ions is as low as a few eV.The interest in electron beam generated plasmas for materials processing can be traced back at least 4 decades. In the early 1970s Bunshah 4 described an electron beam vapor deposition system that utilizes an electron beam to both vaporize the metal and "activate" the background gas. It was also noted by Dugdale 5 that high-energy electron beam systems developed for welding could be employed for "soft vacuum vapor deposition" in a manner similar to that of Bunshah. In the 1980s, Collins and co-workers at Colorado State University, developed electron beam produced plasmas for plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition of SiO 2 . 6,7 This system used a sheet-like beam of multi-keV electrons injected parallel to the growth substrate. A similar configurat...
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Three different types of optical phenomena have been observed at high altitude above thunderstorms: an enhanced airglow ("elves") at roughly ---90 km; a reddish glow ("sprites") from 50 to 90 km; and an upward moving, bluish emission ("jets") below 40 km. A likely explanation for some or all of these phenomena is gas breakdown caused by the electromagnetic fields of lightning discharges. This paper examines the connection between these fields and breakdown at high altitude, using both analytic models and numerical simulations. Included in the calculations are the radiation fields from the lightning return stroke and the quasi-static fields from the continuing current. The different nature of the two fields is shown to produce two distinct types of breakdown, with characteristics similar to those of elves and sprites. Also mentioned is a third breakdown mechanism which may account for blue jets. 29,65329,654 FERNSLER AND ROWLAND: LIGHTNING-PRODUCED SPRITES AND ELVES
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