“…Submerged nonthermal microplasmas can be realized by biasing a small electrode, slightly in contact with an electrolyte, with a high enough positive or negative DC voltage, relative to a much larger counter electrode. [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] The optical emissions can be visually localized within a thin gaseous sheath of a few tens of micrometers that forms around the smaller electrode, thus insulating it from the surrounding solution. [1,3,4,7] If, for whatever reason, the gas film is breached by the moving liquid boundary, there will be a very fast surge in power to reform it again and re-establish the plasma regime, which makes the process somehow self-sustaining.…”