2006
DOI: 10.1063/1.2360507
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A radio-frequency sheath boundary condition and its effect on slow wave propagation

Abstract: Predictive modeling of radiofrequency wave propagation in high-power fusion experiments requires accounting for nonlinear losses of wave energy in the plasma edge and at the wall. An important mechanism of "anomalous" power losses is the acceleration of ions into the walls by rf sheath potentials. Previous work computed the "sheath power dissipation" non-self-consistently by post-processing fields obtained as the solution of models which did not retain sheaths. Here, a method is proposed for a self-consistent … Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(121 citation statements)
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“…However, salient sheath effects can be represented by a "sub-grid sheath boundary condition" [5], in which local capacitive and resistive circuit elements associated with the presence of the sheath are defined at the nodes of grid cells intersecting the material boundary. This formulation enables a local sheath potential to be defined at the boundary.…”
Section: Fdtd Methods For Em Waves In Plasmamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, salient sheath effects can be represented by a "sub-grid sheath boundary condition" [5], in which local capacitive and resistive circuit elements associated with the presence of the sheath are defined at the nodes of grid cells intersecting the material boundary. This formulation enables a local sheath potential to be defined at the boundary.…”
Section: Fdtd Methods For Em Waves In Plasmamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the RF timescale, RF sheaths are often treated as thin dielectric layers of width  between the wall and the quasi-neutral plasma. The associated RF SBC was first formulated in [4] and reads…”
Section: Rf and DC Sheath Boundary Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inside this domain and as shown on figure 2, three fields are solved for: the RF parallel electric field E , an oscillating sheath voltage V RF (both varying as as exp(−iω 0 t) at the wave pulsation ω 0 ) and the DC plasma potential V DC . Sheaths at both ends of open flux tubes are described by RF and DC sheaths boundary conditions [17,18]. The non-linear I-V characteristic of the sheaths couples the RF and DC quantities.…”
Section: Sswich-sw Asymptoticmentioning
confidence: 99%