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Motiviert durch den Vorschlag einer direkten, optischen Ladungsmessung an Staubteilchen wird die Lichtstreuung an den dielektrischen Kern-Schale-Teilchen tiefgehend untersucht.
Das Streuregime wird durch Analyse des Nah- und Fernfeldes unter Verwendung von Methoden, die für homogene Teilchen entwickelt wurden, eingehend charakterisiert und eine Verallgemeinerung der dazu verwendeten Funktionen auf ein k-fach beschichtetes Teilchen angegeben. Dabei werden die sich im Teilcheninneren manifestierenden Effekte der Hybridisierung der beiden Oberflächenphononen des Kern-Schale-Teilchens herausgearbeitet und visualisiert.
Die vorliegende Untersuchung der unterschiedlichen Kenngrößen ermöglicht ein detailliertes und umfangreiches Verständnis der Lichtstreuung an dielektrischen Kern-Schale-Teilchen und der Art und Weise, wie sich die Hybridisierung der Oberflächenphononen auf diese auswirkt.
Die dabei analysierte Interferenzstruktur des elektromagnetischen Feldes in der Teilchenschale, berechnet mittels der vollen Mie-Rechnung, passt zur Interpretation der optischen Antwort des Kern-Schale-Teilchens mithilfe der Hybridisierungstheorie.
Dieses Hybridisierungsbild und somit die Subsysteme und ihre Wechselwirkung werden in dieser Arbeit aus den analytisch exakten Mie-Koeffizienten heraus präpariert, um die neue Sichtweise mit der alten Mie-Theorie zusammenzubringen.
Die Idee einer spektroskopische Ladungsmessung wird im Hinblick auf die Bestimmung der Wandladung aufgegriffen. Die bisherigen Methoden zur Ladungsmessung sind zwar vielfältig, bieten jedoch nur Zugang zur absoluten Wandladung und liefern keine Informationen über ihre Verteilung senkrecht zur Oberfläche oder über die Dynamik der Aufladung.
Beides wäre jedoch für ein mikroskopisches Verständnis der Plasma-Wand-Wechselwirkung notwendig, sodass die Elektronenenergieverlustspektroskopie zur Ladungsbestimmung vorgeschlagen wird. Die Methode wird zunächst anhand einer lokalen Antworttheorie für verschiedene in die Wand eingesetzte Schichtstrukturen ausgelotet und aufgrund vielversprechender Resultate anschließend mittels der im betrachteten Parameterbereich notwendigen nichtlokalen Antworttheorie eingehend untersucht. Diese Theorie erfasst die Anregung von Resonanzen höherer Moden, die sich als besonders sensitiv auf die zusätzlichen Ladungsträger erweisen. Insgesamt wird ein experimenteller Aufbau mit einer geeigneten, in die Plasmakammerwand einsetzbaren Schichtstruktur vorgeschlagen, mit dem die Wandladung durch Elektronenenergieverlustspektroskopie bestimmt werden könnte.
This work presents the first experimental investigation of the gas balance on the optimized modular stellarator Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X). A balance of all injected and removed particles and a measurement of internal particle reservoirs allows inference of the bound particle reservoir in the wall, which is of interest due to its effects on plasma density control and fuel retention. Different scenarios of the gas balance are presented with data from the operation campaign 1.2 with an inertially cooled graphite divertor. Both net outgassing and net retention scenarios are presented and W7-X is found to operate stable in a wide range of scenarios with varying wall conditions.
Since fusion experiments are conducted in ultra-high vacuum, suitable gauges are required for total and partial pressure measurement. The challenges and opportunities of the operation of pressure gauges in the steady magnetic field extending beyond plasma pulses are discussed. The performance of newly improved neutral pressure gauges, based on crystal cathode emitters is quantified. These provide improved operational robustness since they can be operated for long periods of time in strong magnetic fields. A crystal cathode setup and and its operation performance is presented along with a fast calibration scheme.
Partial pressure measurements provide additional important information complementing the total neutral pressure measurements, and allowing additional physics insights. As part of this thesis work, a new diagnostic of this kind was implemented on W7-X, the so-called diagnostic residual gas analyzer (DRGA). It provides a wealth of information on various neutral gas species, with a relatively high time resolution - of order a few seconds. The diagnostic setup and its first results are presented in this thesis.
In this thesis, I present work motivated, in part, by a series of upcoming laboratory experiments (APEX), which seeks to uncover some of the inner workings of turbulence and stability in electron- positron plasmas in closed field-line systems. I present the results of several distinct, but connected, problems addressing the theory of electron-positron plasmas.
This work is partitioned into several parts, which loosely correspond to different particulars of the APEX experiment and the different theoretical physics problems which reside within.
I begin with the derivation of a kinetic theory for plasmas which are optically thin to cyclotron emission, as indeed, experimental pair plasmas are expected to be. The results of this section include: (1) the derivation of a general kinetic theory of cyclotron radiation in electron-ion plasmas; (2) a calculation showing that cyclotron emission results in strongly anisotropic distribution functions on the radiation timescale; (3) calculation of the evolution of the distribution function under collisional scattering which, in the absence of any radiation terms, acts to drive the plasma towards a Maxwellian; (4) generalisation of this theory to more exotic geometries; (5) specialisation of this theory to pair plasmas of experimental interest; and (6) presentation of the applications and the limitations of this theory.
The second project is primarily concerned with non-neutral plasmas. We begin with gyrokinetic theory and a novel extension of this theoretical framework to plasmas with arbitrary degree of neutrality in straight field-line geometry. I go on to discuss the gyrokinetic stability theory of such plasmas in this simplified geometry. I conclude this project with a discussion of some further
nuances in the theory of singly-charged non-neutral plasmas, this time concerning global features. Namely, I declare an interest in the equilibria such plasmas might be able to attain.
The final project pertains to plasmas which are in state of Maxwellian equilibrium i.e., electron- positron plasmas with sufficiently large number densities of each species to attain a stationary quasineutral plasma. To this end, I present gyrokinetic flux-tube simulations of electron-positron plasmas in complex, and experimentally relevant, magnetic geometries on the road towards a study of gyrokinetic turbulence. The results of this work include: (1) the first simulations of electron- positron plasmas in a stellarator and ring-dipole geometry; (2) an analytic theory of trapped particle modes in electron-positron plasmas, a result which can also be verified numerically; and (3) extension of several important theoretical results in electron-positron plasmas to experimentally relevant geometries. The culmination of this project is the roadmap ahead towards demonstration of the so-called “inward pinch” effect in electron-positron plasmas in a magnetic Z-pinch.
This study evaluated the impact of a defined plasma treated water (PTW) when applied to various stages within fresh-cut endive processing. The quality characteristic responses were investigated to establish the impact of the PTW unit processes and where PTW may be optimally applied in a model process line to retain or improve produce quality. Different stages of application of PTW within the washing process were investigated and compared to tap water and chlorine dioxide. Fresh-cut endive (Cichorium endivia L.) samples were analyzed for retention of food quality characteristics. Measurements included color, texture, and nitrate quantification. Effects on tissue surface and cell organelles were observed through scanning electron and atomic force microscopy. Overall, the endive quality characteristics were retained by incorporating PTW in the washing process. Furthermore, promising results for color and texture characteristics were observed, which were supported by the microscopic assays of the vegetal tissue. While ion chromatography detected high concentrations of nitrite and nitrate in PTW, these did not affect the nitrate concentration of the lettuce tissue post-processing and were below the concentrations within EU regulations. These results provide a pathway to scale up the industrial application of PTW to improve and retain quality characteristic retention of fresh leafy products, whilst also harnessing the plasma functionalized water as a process intervention for reducing microbial load at multiple points, whether on the food surface, within the process water or on food-processing surfaces.
To suit a wide variety of space mission profiles, different designs of ion thrusters were developed, such as the High‐Efficiency‐Multistage‐Plasma thrusters (HEMP‐T). In the past, the optimization of ion thrusters was a difficult and time‐consuming process and evolved experimentally. Because the construction of new designs is expensive, cheaper methods for optimization were sought‐after. Computer‐based simulations are a cheap and useful method towards predictive modelling. The physics in HEMP‐T requires a kinetic model. The Particle‐in‐Cell (PIC) method delivers self‐consistent solutions for the plasmas of ion thrusters, but it is limited by the high amount of computing time required to study a specific system. Therefore, it is not suited to explore a wide operational and design space. An approach to decrease computing time is self‐similarity scaling schemes, which can be derived from the kinetic equations. One specific self‐similarity scheme is investigated quantitatively in this work for selected HEMP‐Ts, using PIC simulations. The possible application of the scaling is explained and the limits of this approach are derived.
Electrostatic forces at the cell interface affect the nature of cell adhesion and function; but there is still limited knowledge about the impact of positive or negative surface charges on cell-material interactions in regenerative medicine. Titanium surfaces with a variety of zeta potentials between −90 mV and +50 mV were generated by functionalizing them with amino polymers, extracellular matrix proteins/peptide motifs and polyelectrolyte multilayers. A significant enhancement of intracellular calcium mobilization was achieved on surfaces with a moderately positive (+1 to +10 mV) compared with a negative zeta potential (−90 to −3 mV). Dramatic losses of cell activity (membrane integrity, viability, proliferation, calcium mobilization) were observed on surfaces with a highly positive zeta potential (+50 mV). This systematic study indicates that cells do not prefer positive charges in general, merely moderately positive ones. The cell behavior of MG-63s could be correlated with the materials’ zeta potential; but not with water contact angle or surface free energy. Our findings present new insights and provide an essential knowledge for future applications in dental and orthopedic surgery.
In this work, studies with respect to the exhaust problem were performed
in the stellarator experiment Wendelstein 7-X with different target concepts and different magnetic field geometries. Different infrared cameras were used to study the heat flux from the plasma onto the PFC. In the first publication, the limiter set-up was used with a simpler magnetic topology in the plasma edge. The radial fall-off of the parallel heat flux for inboard limiters in W7-X shows, similar to inboard limiters in tokamaks, two different radial fall-off lengths, a short (narrow) one, characterizing the near-SOL, and a long (broad) characterizing the far-SOL. For the far-SOL, the heating power and connection length have been identified as the main scaling parameters, while for the near-SOL, the electron temperature close to the LCFS has been identified as the main scaling parameter. The two fall-off lengths differ by a factor 10, and the found scalings for both regimes differ from known models and experimental scalings in tokamaks. A turbulent-driven feature was discussed in the publication as a possible explanation for the behavior of the fall-off length in W7-X.
The gained information and data have been further used to support many
other publications, covering the symmetry of the heat loads, the
energy balance of the machine, and seeding experiments.
The heat exhaust in W7-X with an island divertor was studied in the second
and third publication. Definitions of parameters such as peaking factor and
wetted area were applied for the heterogeneous heat flux pattern on the
W7-X divertor. It was shown that the island divertor concept is capable
of spreading out the heat efficiently, resulting in large wetted areas of up to 1.5 m2. The reached values for the wetted area are comparable to the ones of the larger tokamak JET but with a much smaller ratio of wetted
area to the area of the last closed flux surface. Furthermore, a positive
scaling of the wetted area with the power in the SOL was observed. This
scaling is beneficial for future reactors but needs further investigation of the involved transport processes. The peaking factor (discussed in the second publication) describes how concentrated the heat load is within the region of the strike line. It was shown that this factor is decreasing for increasing densities without affecting the wetted area. The present work paves the way for further analysis of the transport processes of the heat flux towards the island divertor of Wendelstein 7-X.
The active screen plasma nitrocarburizing (ASPNC) technology is a state-of-the-art plasma-assisted heat treatment for improving surface hardness and wear resistance of metallic workpieces based on thermochemical diffusion. In comparison to conventional plasma nitrocarburizing, the use of an active screen (AS) improves thermal homogeinity at the workload and reduces soot formation. Further it can serve as a chemical source for the plasma processes, e.g. by use of an AS made of carbon-fibre reinforced carbon. This compilation of studies investigates the plasma-chemical composition of industrial- and laboratory-scale ASPNC plasmas, predominantly using in-situ laser absorption spectroscopy with lead-salt tuneable diode lasers, external-cavity quantum cascade lasers, and a frequency comb. In this way the temperatures and concentrations of the dominant stable molecular species HCN, NH3, CH4, C2H2, and CO, as well as of less prevelant species, were recorded as functions of e.g. the pressure, the applied plasma power, the total feed gas flow and its composition. Additionally, the diagnostics were applied to a chemically similar plasma-assisted process for diamond deposition.
Resulting from this thesis are new insights into the practical application of an AS made of CFC, the plasma-chemistry involving hydrogen, nitrogen, and carbon, and the particular role of CO as an indicator for reactor contamination. The effect of the feed gas composition on the resulting nitrogen- and carbon-expanded austenite layers was proven by combination of in-situ laser absorption spectroscopy with post-treatment surface diagnostics. Furthermore this work marks the first use of frequency comb spectroscopy with sub-nominally resolved Michelson interferometry for investigation of a low-pressure molecular discharge. This way the rotational bands of multiple species were simultaneously measured, resulting in temperature information at a precision hitherto not reached in the field of nitrocarburizing plasmas.
Es wurde eine Methode zur Herstellung ultradünner Filme aus Metall bzw. metallischen Verbindungen (Legierungen) etabliert. Die Struktur und die physikalischen Eigenschaften der Filme wurden untersucht. Die entwickelte Präparationsmethode beruht auf induzierter Filmkontraktion nach erzwungener Benetzung (iFCaFW). Die Filme bestehen aus ultradünnen vertikal heterostrukturierten Multischichten (2D-VHML), sie entstehen durch den Beschichtungsvorgang und bestehen aus jeweils einer nm-dicken metallischen Schicht (M) eingebettet zwischen zwei Metall(hydr)oxidschichten (MOxHy) im nm- bis sub-nm Bereich. Dieser vertikal heterostrukturierte Aufbau wurde bei allen untersuchten Filmmaterialien beobachtet. Alle in dieser Arbeit vorgestellten Schichtsysteme wurden unter atmosphärischem Druck hergestellt. Es konnten Substrate aus Silicium und Muskovit sowie aus Borosilikat- und Kalk-Natron-Glas (Objektträger) beschichtet werden. Jede, aus flüssigem Metall bzw. flüssiger Legierung hergestellte Schicht verfügt über eine feste (Hydr)oxidschicht an der Luftgrenzfläche. Diese feste (Hydr)oxidschicht fungiert als Substrat für die nächste darüber aufgebrachte Schicht aus flüssigem Metall bzw. flüssiger Legierung. Somit entstehen vertikal heterostrukturierte Multischichten durch identische Wiederholung des Beschichtungsvorgangs. Dies ist eine innovative und vergleichsweise umweltfreundliche Methode, um transparente, elektrisch leitfähige und lateral homogene nm-dünne ein- oder mehrschichtige Metallfilme herzustellen. Verwendet wurden Metalle mit sehr niedriger Schmelztemperatur (kleiner als 300 °C), wie Bismut, Gallium, Indium, Zinn und ihre Legierungen. Die hohe Oberflächenspannung der geschmolzenen Metalle und Legierungen sowie die Adhäsion mit der die (Hydr)oxidhaut dieser Metalle und Legierungen auf verschiedenen Substraten haftet ermöglicht die Beschichtungsmethode.