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Institute
- Institut für Physik (160) (remove)
In this thesis wave propagation in the whistler wave frequency range ωci≤ω≤ωce in the linear magnetized plasma experiment VINETA is investigated. The plasma is generated by a helicon antenna and has a diameter of about 10 cm. Whistler waves are launched by a loop antenna with a diameter of 4.5 cm and the fluctuating magnetic field is mapped by Ḃ-probes. Experiments are carried out for plasma parameters γ≤1/ √ 2 under which the only transversal polarized wave according to plane wave dispersion theory is the whistler wave. Due to the small collision frequencies ν≪1 cyclotron damping of whistler waves in this parameter regime is dominant and depends only on the electron plasma-β. The influence of the inhomogeneous plasma profile and excitation by a loop antenna is investigated by measurements of the fluctuating magnetic field perpendicular to the ambient magnetic field in azimuthal and radial axial planes. A mode characterized by the number of wave lengths m in the azimuthal direction is found. The mode structure is modified by the specific shape of the plasma density profile. Profiles with a homogeneous density inside the plasma radius are found to posses a comparably simple mode structure. An agreement in the mode structure of full-wave simulations in three dimensions, including a Gaussian density profile and excitation of the wave by a loop antenna, with the experimental results is found. Conclusions on the spatial structure of the excited mode are drawn using the simulations which predict excitation of an m=2 mode. The wave is found to be ducted within the plasma radius over a wide parameter range. A Helmholtz decomposition of the simulations electric field exhibits the fluctuating space charge as the dominant source for the electric field, while the contribution due to induction is negligible. The magnetic field is given partially by the electron and displacement current. Both contributions to the magnetic field are of the same order of magnitude. The frequency dependency of the excited modes spatial damping increment is investigated using measurements of the magnetic fluctuations along the symmetry axis of the plasma. In order to illustrate the parameter dependency, the electron plasma-β is varied over two orders in magnitude in the range β = 4·10-4 - 2.4·10-2. The experimental result for the spatial damping increment of the mode yields a strong damping for wave frequencies ω/ωce > 0.5 at maximum plasma-β, which shifts to higher frequencies with decreasing β. The parameter dependency of the damping for a fixed frequency is studied in an axial ambient magnetic field gradient. In both cases an excellent agreement between the experimental result and predictions for cyclotron damping from plane wave dispersion theory is found.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die Wechselwirkungen zwischen den reaktiven Sauerstoffspezies (ROS) und den Lipiden, die das Grundgerüst der Zellmembran bilden, sowie die daraus resultierenden chemischen und physikalischen Veränderungen der Membran untersucht. Außerdem wurde der Schutz einer Modellmembran durch Adsorption eines Polymers untersucht. Da natürliche Zellmembrane hoch komplexe Systeme sind, in und an denen chemische und strukturelle Prozesse häufig gleichzeitig ablaufen, wurden Lipidmonoschichten und Liposomen als Modellmembranen für die Untersuchungen gewählt. Die Radikale wurden mithilfe der Fenton-Reaktion erzeugt. Um ein vollständiges Bild des Radikalangriffs auf Modellmembrane zu erhalten, war es notwendig verschiedene Untersuchungsmethoden zu verwenden. Die Lipidmonoschichten und deren Phasenumwandlungen wurden vor und nach dem Radikalangriff mithilfe des Langmuir-Troges und den damit aufgenommenen Isothermen untersucht. Die Fluoreszenz- und die Brewsterwinkel-Mikroskopie wurde genutzt, um die Veränderungen des Phasenübergangs und somit die Veränderungen der Form und des Wachstums von Lipid-Domänen (flüssig-kondensierten Phase) durch den Radikalangriff zu beobachten. Die laterale periodische Struktur und das vertikale Elektronendichteprofil der Lipidmonoschicht wurden mit der Röntgendiffraktion und Röntgenreflexion vor und nach dem Radikalangriff untersucht. Mit der Infrarot-Reflexion-Absorption Spektroskopie (IRRAS) können Aussagen über die chemische Veränderungen der Lipide nach dem Radikalangriff getroffen werden. Die Liposomen wurden mit Differenzkalorimetrie untersucht, um die Verschiebung der Phasenübergangstemperatur durch den Radikalangriff zu beobachten. Der Radikalangriff auf Liposomen wurde mit Fluorenzmikroskopie verfolgt. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wurde die Wechselwirkung von ROS mit zwitterionisch geladenen Lipiden untersucht. Die Modellmembranen bestanden aus Phosphatidylcholinen. Fasst man alle Ergebnisse der Untersuchungen zusammen, führt dies zum folgenden Resultat: Die Radikale reagieren bevorzugt mit der Kopfgruppe der zwitterionischen Phosphatidylcholinen. Es entstehen negativ geladene Phospholipide mit einer kleineren Kopfgruppe. Die Alkylketten bleiben nach dem Radikalangriff unverändert. Wie die Isothermen und die Brewsterwinkel-Mikroskopie bei Monoschichten sowie die Thermogramme bei Liposomen zeigen, hat die Reaktion keinen erkennbaren Einfluss auf das thermodynamische Verhalten. Erst durch Zugabe bzw. bei Vorhandensein von „freien“ Eisen-Ionen wird die Veränderung der Phosphocholine durch die Radikale beobachtbar. Die „freien“ Eisen-Ionen binden an die negativ geladenen Phospholipde. Dies führt im Fall von DPPC (1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) Monoschichten zu einer irreversiblen Verfestigung. Weiterhin kommt es zur Abnahme der molekularen Fläche in der flüssig-kondensierten Phase. Im Fall von DMPC (1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) Liposomen führt der Radikalangriff, bei Vorhandensein von „freien“ Eisen-Ionen, ebenfalls zu einer Verfestigung. Am Ende des Radikalangriffs sind die Liposomen zerstört. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde die Wechselwirkung von ROS mit negativ geladenen Phospholipiden untersucht. Dabei wurde herausgefunden, dass die negative Ladung der Phospholipide nach dem Radikalangriff erhalten bleibt. Die Alkylkettenlänge bleibt konstant. Die durchgeführten IRRAS Messungen zeigen ebenfalls keine Veränderungen der Alkylketten. Aufgrund der Beobachtung, dass Eisen-Ionen negativ geladene Modellmembranen verfestigen, sollte im dritten Teil dieser Arbeit die Eisenanbindung an negativ geladene Monoschichten am Beispiel des Cardiolipin TMCL quantifiziert werden. Bei einem physiologischen pH-Wert führt eine Eisen-Ionen Konzentration im mikromolaren Bereich zu einer irreversiblen Verfestigung der Monoschicht. Der pH-Wert ist ein entscheidender Parameter. Eine irreversible Verfestigung der Monoschicht kann durch einen pH-Wert von 1,3 oder niedriger verhindert werden, wenn die Eisenkonzentration kleiner als 1000 µM ist. Bei höheren Eisenkonzentrationen tritt auch bei diesem pH-Wert eine Verfestigung ein. Im vierten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde die Wechselwirkung von ROS mit einer negativ geladenen Lipid-Monoschicht (DMPG) mit adsorbierten Polykationen (Polyethylenimin (PEI)) untersucht. Die adsorbierte Polymerschicht dient zum Schutz der Lipidmonoschicht. Der Radikalangriff wurde mit verschiedenen Fenton-Konzentrationen durchgeführt. Es war eine signifikant höhere Fenton-Konzentration als bei dem Radikalangriff auf eine DPPC Monoschicht notwendig, um Veränderungen zu induzieren.
The layer-by-layer method is a robust way of surface functionalization using a wide range of materials, e.g. synthetic and natural polyelectrolytes (PEs), proteins and nanoparticles. Thus, this method yields films with applications in diverse areas including biology and medicine. Sequential adsorption of different oppositely charged macromolecules can be used to prepare tailored films with controlled molecular organization. In biomedical research, electrically conductive coatings are of interest. In manuscript 1, we investigated films sequentially assembled from the polycation poly (diallyldimethyl-ammonium) (PDADMA) and modified carbon nanotubes (CNTs), with CNTs serving as the electrically conductive material. We assume that charge transport occurs through CNT contacts. We showed that with more than four CNT/PDADMA bilayers, the electrical conductivity is constant and independent of the number of CNT/PDADMA bilayers. A conductivity up to 4∙10^3 S/m was found. It is possible to control the conductivity with the CNT concentration of the CNT deposition suspension. A higher CNT concentration resulted in thicker CNT/PDADMA bilayers, but in a lower conductivity per bilayer. We suspect that an increased CNT concentration leads to a rapid CNT adsorption without the possibility to rearrange themselves. If PDADMA then adsorbs on the disordered CNTs in the next deposition step, the average thickness of the polymer layer is thicker than on the more ordered CNT layer from the dilute solution. This leads to an increased PE monomer/CNT ratio and lower conductivity. More polycations between the CNT layers leads to less CNT contacts. Thus, the controlled composition of films can be used to fulfill specific requirements.
For many applications of polyelectrolyte multilayers (PEMs), cheap PEs with a broad distribution of molecular weights are used. It was unknown whether the distribution of molecular weights of the PE in the adsorption solution is maintained during the adsorption process and hence in the film. To investigate this, the PSS adsorption solution in article 2 consisted of a binary mixture of short and long poly (styrene sulfonate) (PSS). A good model system to study layered films in terms of composition are PDADMA/PSS multilayers. Neutron reflectivity and in-situ ellipsometry measurements were carried out to determine the PSS composition in the film and the growth regimes. At a mole fraction of long PSS of 5 % or more in solution, the exponential growth (which is characteristic of short PSS) is totally suppressed, and only long PSS is deposited in the resulting multilayer. Variation of adsorption time of PSS showed that short PSS first adsorbs to the surface but is displaced by long PSS. Between 0 and 5 % of long PSS in the adsorption solution exponential growth occurs. The fraction of short PSS in the film continuously decreases with the increase of long PSS in the adsorption solution. In the assembly of films prepared from binary PSS mixtures, the short PSS leaves the film through adsorption/desorption steps both during PSS adsorption and during PDADMA adsorption (as PDADMA/PSS complexes). Both techniques show that the composition of the film does not correspond to that of the deposition solution. The composition and thus the properties of the resulting multilayer are influenced by the choice of adsorption time. Moreover, we conclude that a multilayer grown from a polydisperse polyelectrolyte contains fewer mobile low molecular weight polymers than the deposition solution.
In manuscript 1 and article 2, the composition of multilayers was studied. In manuscript 1 adsorption kinetics were important for the arrangement of CNTs on the surface. In article 2, the adsorption kinetics, i.e. the diffusion of the polyelectrolytes to the surface, was also investigated. In article 3, we investigated the influence of the composition of the film as well as the preparation condition on the mobility of PEs in the film. The molecular weight of the polycation PDADMA and the NaCl concentration of the deposition solution were varied. The vertical PSS diffusion constant D_PSS within the PDADMA/PSS multilayers was measured using neutron reflectivity. The salt concentration of the preparation solution defines the polymer conformation during deposition. The molecular weight of the polycation determines the degree of intertwining. Together, both parameters determine the polyanion-polycation coupling and thus the PSS mobility within the network. Log−log display of D_PSS vs the molecular weight of PDADMA and fits to two power laws (D_PSS ∝ X_n(PDADMA)^(-m) ∝ M_w(PDADMA)^(-m)) reveals for films built from 10 or 200 mM NaCl a kink. Below and above the kink, the dependence of D_PSS on M_w(PDADMA) can be described by different power laws. For Χ_n(PDADMA) < X_n,kink(PDADMA) ≈ 288, the exponents are consistent with the predictions of the sticky reptation model. X_n(PDADMA) ≈ 288 is the entanglement limit. For Χ_n(PDADMA) > X_n,kink(PDADMA) ≈ 288, the decrease of D_PSS with M_w(PDADMA) is larger than below the entanglement limit, which is indicative of sticky reptation and entanglement. The PSS diffusion constant of films built from 100 mM NaCl drops three orders of magnitude when increasing the molecular weight of PDADMA from 45 kDa to 72 kDa. To figure out if an immobile PSS fraction exists in the film built from 72 kDa PDADMA (beyond the entanglement limit), the film was annealed at different conditions in article 4: both temperature and salt concentration were varied. For data analysis, the simplest model with two PSS fractions with different diffusion constants was used. These diffusion constants increase as the temperature of the surrounding solution is increased. As assumed in article 3, an immobile PSS fraction exists when annealing at room temperature. At higher annealing temperatures, at least two diffusion processes must be distinguished: the diffusion of the highly mobile PSS fraction through the entire film and a slow PSS fraction, mowing in a limited way. The choice of preparation conditions determines whether a polyelectrolyte multilayer can intermix completely. It is not clear if complete intermixing will ever occur for films built with PDADMA beyond the entanglement limit. It is possible that the diffusion is more complex. Long-term measurements will clarify this question. Calculating scattering length density profiles with subdiffusive behavior would be interesting and is a challenge for the future. Furthermore, immobile fractions are only visible with long annealing times. We hypothesize that an immobile or nearly immobile fraction is present whenever the dependence of D_PSS on the molecular weight of PDADMA cannot be described by the sticky reptation. To verify this hypothesis, further studies are necessary.
All results presented and discussed in the manuscript and articles show that by varying the preparation conditions, tailored films can be built. The composition of the film is also determined by the adsorption kinetics. In addition, the mobility of the PEs within the multilayers can be controlled by varying the conformation, mingling and entanglement of the chains within the film. The influence of the salt concentration in the preparation solution on the growth regimes during film formation is part of our future research. It is planned to investigate films built of different PDADMA molecular weights under varied annealing conditions to better understand the mobile and immobile fractions.
In dieser Arbeit wurden Experimente an einem DC-Magnetron-Beschichtungsplasma zur (reaktiven) Abscheidung von Ti, TiNx und TiOx-Schichten durchgeführt. Das Ziel war es, durch Korrelation von Messungen des Ionen- und des Energieeinstroms auf das Substrat während des Beschichtungsvorgangs mit Analysen der abgeschiedenen Schichten Aussagen über die Zusammenhänge von Abscheidebedingungen und Schichteigenschaften zu treffen. Von besonderem Interesse waren hierbei die Unterschiede zwischen den beiden Betriebsmodi des eingesetzten Magnetrons (balanced mode und unbalanced mode), da sich über diesen Parameter der Ioneneinstrom auf das Substrat signifikant beeinflussen lässt, sowie der Einfluss hochenergetischer negativ geladener Ionen, die beim Einsatz von Sauerstoff im Gegensatz zu dem von Stickstoff als Reaktivgas auftreten. Die Maxima der mittels energieaufgelöster Massenspektrometrie gemessenen Energieverteilungen aller Ionenspezies liegen im unbalanced mode im Vergleich zum balanced mode bei um etwa 0,2...1 eV höherer Energie. Der im Wesentlichen von den einfach positiv geladenen Argonionen und bei hohem Reaktivgasfluss den molekularen Reaktivgasionen getragene Gesamtioneneinstrom auf das Substrat ist im unbalanced mode deutlich höher als im balanced mode. Der mit Hilfe einer Thermosonde gemessene Energieeinstrom auf das Substrat steigt linear mit der Entladungsleistung an. Im unbalanced mode ist er, bedingt durch den höheren Gesamtioneneinstrom auf das Substrat und die größere mittlere Energie aller Ionenspezies, um mehr als eine Größenordnung höher als im balanced mode. Eine Abhängigkeit des Energieeinstroms vom Reaktivgasfluss wurde nicht beobachtet. Die röntgenreflektometrisch gemessenen Beschichtungsraten steigen über der Entladungsleistung linear an und sind im unbalanced mode trotz geringerer Sputterraten am Target um ca. 10...20 % höher als im balanced mode. Die Begründung hierfür liefert der im unbalanced mode deutlich höhere Energieeinstrom auf das Substrat. Durch diesen erhöhten Energieeintrag in die aufwachsenden Schichten steht im unbalanced mode mehr Energie für Prozesse an der Oberfläche, wie die Oberflächendiffusion, zur Verfügung. Die somit verbesserte laterale Mobilität der Teilchen an der Oberfläche führt dazu, dass diese besser in die wachsende Kristallstruktur eingebaut werden können. Damit ergibt sich letztendlich im unbalanced mode trotz des geringeren Teilcheneinstroms in allen untersuchten Plasmen eine höhere Abscheiderate von Titan auf dem Substrat. Der Energieeinstrom auf das Substrat ist demnach durch seinen signifikanten Einfluss auf die laterale Mobilität der aufwachsenden Teilchen ein bestimmender Parameter für das Schichtwachstum. Die durch die Beimischung von Reaktivgas zum Plasma auftretende Targetnitrierung bzw. –oxidation verursacht ein deutliches Absinken der Sputterraten am Target und damit der Beschichtungsraten über dem Reaktivgasfluss. Messungen der chemischen Zusammensetzungen der Schichten mittels Röntgenphotoelektronenspektroskopie zeigen, dass die Menge des in die Schichten eingebauten Reaktivgases über dessen Konzentration im Beschichtungsplasma zu kontrollieren ist. Im Argon-Stickstoff-Plasma sind die Werte der aus den röntgenreflektometrisch erhaltenen Dichten bei den im unbalanced mode abgeschiedenen Schichten deutlich höher als bei den im balanced mode abgeschiedenen. Untersuchungen mittels Röntgendiffraktometrie zeigen für diese Schichten auch höhere makroskopische Spannungen. Offenbar führt der größere Energieeinstrom hier zu lokalen Temperaturunterschieden, aus denen aufgrund unterschiedlicher Ausdehnungskoeffizienten von Schicht und Substrat beim Abkühlen makroskopische Schichtspannungen resultieren. Insgesamt werden im Argon-Stickstoff-Plasma im unbalanced mode des Magnetrons kompaktere Schichten mit weniger Lücken abgeschieden als unter denselben Bedingungen im balanced mode. Im Argon-Sauerstoff-Plasma wird dieser positive Effekt des höheren Energieeintrags in die aufwachsenden Schichten durch den im unbalanced mode deutlich höheren Beschuss des Substrats mit hochenergetischen negativ geladenen Sauerstoffionen mehr als aufgehoben. Dadurch kommt es in diesem Betriebsmodus des Magnetrons zu einer erhöhten Lückenbildung in den aufwachsenden Schichten, die somit geringere makroskopische Spannungen und geringere mittlere Dichten aufweisen als die im balanced mode abgeschiedenen. Die Summe dieser Ergebnisse zeigt, dass die Eigenschaften der im hier untersuchten DC-Magnetronplasma abgeschiedenen Schichten maßgeblich von der Zusammensetzung des Beschichtungsplasmas und insbesondere von der Art und der Energie der auf das Substrat auftreffenden Ionen abhängen.
In der Frequenz kontinuierlich veränderbare Laser sind interessante Lichtquellen für wissenschaftliche Forschung, Industrie und Technik. In diesem Zusammenhang zeigen insbesondere Diodenlaser mit externem Resonator (ECDL) vorteilhafte Eigenschaften. Weit verbreitet ist der Littrow-Laser, da er aufgrund seines einfachen Designs kostengünstig, kompakt und robust ist und zudem eine geringe Linienbreite aufweist. Das bei ihm eingesetzte Reflexions-Gitter fungiert gleichzeitig als Reflektor und Frequenzfilter. Die Durchstimmung erfolgt mechanisch durch Drehung des Gitters mittels eines Piezo-Aktuators. Diese Vorgehensweise begrenzt sowohl die erreichbare Repetitionsrate als auch Durchstimmbereich und -geschwindigkeit. Um diese Probleme zu umgehen, bietet sich der Einsatz zweier akusto-optischer Modulatoren (AOM) als Deflektor im externen Resonator an. Die Durchstimmung eines solchen AOM-Lasers erfolgt durch Ablenkung des Strahls auf rein nicht-mechanischem Weg. Dazu ist allerdings eine geeignete Ansteuerung der AOMs vonnöten. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde ein theoretisches Modell entworfen, welches grundlegende Eigenschaften eines AOM-Lasers beschreibt. Darauf basierend konnte ein Algorithmus zur Berechnung der für eine kontinuierliche Durchstimmung notwendigen AOM-Ansteuersignale entwickelt werden. Dieses Modell zeigt zudem, dass zur Realisierung einer Durchstimmung mit gleichzeitig akzeptabler Laser-Linienbreite hohe Anforderungen an die Ansteuerelektronik, insbesondere bezüglich Jitterfreiheit (< 5 ps), gestellt werden, was nur durch eine vollständig digitale Erzeugung der Ansteuersignale mittels sogenannter DDS-ICs (Direct-Digital-Synthesis) erfüllt werden kann. Andere untersuchte Schaltungen zeigten schlechtere Eigenschaften. Aufgrund der guten Übereinstimmung zwischen dem aufgestellten Modell und dem praktischen AOM-Laseraufbau können im roten Spektralbereich kontinuierliche (modensprungfreie) Durchstimmbereiche von bis zu 220 GHz erreicht werden. Die maximale Durchstimmgeschwindigkeit liegt 1.5 GHz/µs. Eine Repetitionsrate von 25 kHz ist realisierbar. Die 0.2-ms-Linienbreite liegt bei 450 kHz. Der Laser konnte außerdem in einem Bereich von 6 nm (4 THz) ohne mechanische Nachjustage operieren. Eine genaue Analyse zeigt, dass trotz der schon sehr guten Performance des Lasersystems durch Verfeinerung des Modells und eine weitere Verbesserung der Komponenten die genannten Leistungsparameter um einen Faktor 5 - 10 gesteigert werden könnten.
Die Forschung an mikrowelleninduzierten Atmosphärendruckplasmen am INP führte zu verschiedenen potentiellen Applikationen. Dabei besitzt die mikrobiologische Dekontamination sowohl von thermolabilen Medizinprodukten als auch von Lebensmitteln schon zum jetzigen Zeitpunkt ein hohes industrielles Anwendungspotential. Den aufgeführten Anwendungen gemeinsam ist, dass für eine erfolgreiche Weiterentwicklung der Prozesse, sowie der Plasmaquelle, ein grundlegendes Verständnis der vorliegenden dynamischen Mikrowellenplasmawechselwirkung notwendig ist. Durch den begrenzten diagnostischen Zugang der zu untersuchenden Plasmaquelle wird ein kombinierter Ansatz aus diagnostischen Methoden und Modellierung gewählt. Die Entladung wird in Argon bei reduziertem Druck (ab 10 mbar) zur Vereinfachung des Modells betrieben. Daher musste die Plasmaquelle für diesen Einsatz weiterentwickelt werden. Dieses beinhaltet die Neuauslegung der Prozesswärmeabfuhr, auf Grund der nicht oder nur teilweisen Anwendbarkeit von etablierten Verfahren im Atmosphärendruck (hohe Gasflüsse, Wasserkühlung). Die Plasmamikrowellenwechselwirkung dieser Quelle ist anschließend mit Methoden zur Charakterisierung des Plasmas und des Mikrowellenfeldes für unterschiedliche Arbeitspunkte in Druck und Leistung untersucht worden. Zur Bestimmung der Elektronendichte des Plasmas wurde ein frequenzvariables Mikrowelleninterferometer auf Basis eines Vektornetzwerkanalysators erstmalig etabliert. Dieses neue Messsystem wurde im Vorfeld detailliert untersucht, um das korrekte Zusammenspiel aller Komponenten zu überprüfen. In diesem Zusammenhang wurde ein frequenzaufgelöstes Mikrowelleninterferometer zur Messung der Elektronendichte in einer Fluoreszenzlampe aufgebaut. Durch diesen neuartigen Ansatz konnte der Einfluss der dielektrischen Umhüllung (Glasrohr der Lampe) auf die Mikrowelleninterferometrie untersucht werden. In einer weiteren Untersuchung an einem Induktiv Gekoppelten Plasma wurden die Resultate dieses Messsystems mit denen von Langmuir-Sondenmessungen. Auf Grund der konstruktiven Gegebenheiten des Reaktors ist das Plasma nur über ein Fenster für das Mikrowelleninterferometer zugänglich. Der Vergleich der ermittelten Elektronendichten ergab einen Unterschied von Faktor zwei zwischen Interferometer und Langmuir-Sonde. Die Untersuchungen an der Fluoreszenzlampe und dem Induktiv Gekoppelten Plasma zeigten zum einen die korrekte Funktion des neu etablierten frequenzvariablen Mikrowelleninterferometers mit erreichbaren Phasenauflösungen unterhalb von 0,1 mrad. Zum anderen wurde festgestellt, dass die dielektrische Umhüllung des Plasmas zu einem systematischen Fehler von bis 53 % bei der Elektronendichtebestimmung führen kann. Diese gewonnenen Erkenntnisse hatten bei der Konzipierung des Mikrowelleninterferometers zur Untersuchung der Plasmamikrowellenwechselwirkung einen entscheidenden Einfluss. Neben der Untersuchung des Plasmas ist ebenfalls eine Diagnostik des Mikrowellenfeldes nötig, um die Plasmamikrowellenwechselwirkung dieser Entladung experimentell zu charakterisieren. Auf Grundlage dieser Daten können die Resultate des Modells bewertet werden, die einen Einblick in die Plasmaquelle und ihrer dynamischen Vorgänge erlaubt, was für die Weiterentwicklung der Applikationen essentiell ist. Aus diesem Grund ist ein heterodynes Reflektometer entwickelt worden. Dieses Messsystem wurde umfangreich getestet und kann mit einer maximalen Zeitauflösung von 100 ns den komplexen Reflektionsfaktor mit einer Phasengenauigkeit von 10 mrad bestimmen. Das Reflektometer erlaubt einen experimentellen Zugang zur aktiven Zone schon in der Frühphase der Entladung. Mit Hilfe der Diagnostiken zur Untersuchung des Plasmas und des Mikrowellenfeldes wurde die Entladung von der Zündung bis zur stationären Phase charakterisiert und mit den Ergebnissen des Modells verglichen. Es zeigte sich eine gute Übereinstimmung im Millisekundenzeitbereich, sowie eine starke Dynamik im Reflektionsfaktor in der ersten Millisekunde, hervorgerufen durch die Plasmamikrowellenwechselwirkung. Durch die hohe Zeitauflösung des Reflektometers konnten diese Vorgänge im Mikrosekundenzeitbereich erstmalig experimentell aufgelöst werden, was die Interpretation mittels des Modells möglich macht. Es konnten die Vorgänge während der Zündung des Plasmas detailliert untersucht werden und damit die Richtigkeit von Annahmen, die bei der Entwicklung der Zündtechnologie getroffen wurden, überprüft werden. Dieses erworbene grundlegende Verständnis ermöglicht eine Weiterentwicklung dieser Technologie. Mit Hilfe der erzielten Ergebnisse wurde eine neue Optimierungsstrategie für die Abstimmung der Mikrowellenplasmaquelle entwickelt. Dies führte zu einer wesentlichen Verbesserung der Reproduzierbarkeit der mikrobiologischen Ergebnisse. Darüber hinaus bilden die erzielten Ergebnisse eine solide Grundlage für weitere experimentelle und theoretische Untersuchungen dieser Entladung in beispielsweise anderen Arbeitsgasen.
Polyelektrolyt-Multischichten werden durch die sequentielle Adsorption von entgegengesetzt geladenen Polyelektrolyten auf einem festen Substrat hergestellt. Die Präparation layer-by-layer ermöglicht die Beschichtungen von Flächen im cm-Bereich mit Schichtdicken im µm-Bereich sowie einer Kontrolle der Molekülanordnung senkrecht zur Substratoberfläche im nm-Bereich. Aus diesen Eigenschaften ergeben sich zahlreiche Anwendungsmöglichkeiten. Ein Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit ist die Analyse der Polyelektrolyt-Adsorption bei der Präparation von Multischichten bestehend aus dem Polykation Polyallylaminhydrochlorid (PAH) und dem Polyanion Polystyrolsulfonat (PSS) bzw. Polydiallyldimethylammonium (PDADMA) und PSS. Die Untersuchung der Multischichten unter in-situ Bedingungen erfolgt mittels Ellipsometrie. Zu diesem Zweck wird ein Formalismus der ellipsometrischen Datenauswertung entwickelt, um die Messgenauigkeit bei der Untersuchung dünner, transparenter Schichten zu optimieren. Im Fall von PDADMA/PSS-Multischichten verläuft das Schichtwachstum nicht-linear mit der Anzahl an adsorbierten Doppelschichten. Der nicht-lineare Verlauf wird mit der unterschiedlichen Linienladungsdichte zwischen einer PDADMA- und einer PSS-Kette in Verbindung gebracht. Die quantitative Analyse der ellipsometrischen in-situ-Messungen ergibt, dass alle untersuchten PDADMA/PSS-Multischichten (präpariert aus 0,1 mol/L NaCl-Lösung bei Raumtemperatur) mindestens zwei verschiedene Wachstumsregimes aufweisen: Erst wächst die Schichtdicke parabolisch mit der Anzahl an deponierten Polyanion/Polykation-Schichtpaaren, nach Nlin Schichtpaaren erfolgt ein Übergang in lineares Schichtwachstum, charakterisiert durch eine konstante Dicke pro Schichtpaar dBL. Das parabolische Wachstumsregime lässt sich mit einer Asymmetrie im Adsorptionsverhalten von PDADMA und PSS erklären: Während die adsorbierenden PSS-Moleküle die Oberflächenladung lediglich neutralisieren, führt ein PDADMA-Beschichtungsschritt zu einer Ladungsüberkompensation und hinterlässt eine effektiv positiv geladene Oberfläche. Die deponierte Stoffmenge nimmt mit jeder PDADMA/PSS-Doppelschicht zu, bis nach Nlin Doppelschichten die adsorbierenden PSS-Ketten nicht mehr imstande sind alle positiven Oberflächenladungen zu neutralisieren. Die beiden Wachstumsparameter Nlin und dBL hängen in einem linearen Zusammenhang voneinander ab, da beide einem gemeinsamen Mechanismus folgen: Je mehr Doppelschichten ein parabolisches Wachstumsverhalten zeigen (Nlin), desto höher ist die Oberflächenbelegungsdichte am Ende des parabolischen Wachstumsregimes und desto größer die Doppelschichtdicke dBL. Das Adsorptionsverhalten von PDADMA- und PSS-Ketten wird analysiert, indem das Molekulargewicht Mw beider Polyelektrolyte systematisch variiert wird (zwischen Mw(PDADMA) = 24 kDa ... 322 kDa sowie Mw(PSS) = 8,6 kDa ... 168 kDa). Die Flächenbelegungsdichte pro Doppelschicht wächst proportional zu Mw(PDADMA) an, bis ab dem Schwellwert Mw(PDADMA) = 80 kDa eine Sättigung eintritt und das Schichtwachstum unabhängig vom Wert des PDADMA-Molekulargewichts wird (Nlin = 15 Doppelschichten und dBL = (12,3 ± 1,3) nm). Die Daten legen nahe, dass unterhalb des PDADMA-Schwellwerts lediglich ein Teil einer PDADMA-Kette auf der PSS-terminierten Multischicht adsorbiert und der restliche Teil der adsorbierten Kette in Lösung ragt. Oberhalb des PDADMA-Schwellwertes adsorbiert mindestens noch ein zweiter Abschnitt der Kette und es ragt mindestens ein loop in Lösung. Dies führt zu einer konstanten Gleichgewichtsdicke der Monoschicht unabhängig vom Molekulargewicht. Unterschreitet das PSS-Molekulargewicht den Schwellwert Mw(PSS) = 25 kDa, so beobachtet man den gegenteiligen Effekt: beide Wachstumsparameter Nlin und dBL nehmen deutlich zu. Die größten gemessene Werte (unter Verwendung von 8,6 kDa PSS) lauten Nlin = 33 und dBL = 28,7 nm. Neutronenreflektionsmessungen zeigen, dass dieser Effekt mit der Diffusion der kurzen PSS-Ketten innerhalb der Multischicht einhergeht. Die Ausdehnung der Diffusionszone von 8,6 kDa PSS beträgt 80 nm und nimmt bis zum Erreichen des PSS-Schwellwertes monoton mit Mw(PSS) ab. Im Gegensatz dazu bilden PSS-Ketten mit einem Molekulargewicht oberhalb des Schwellwertes klar lokalisierte, lateral homogene Schichten (mit einer Grenzflächenunschärfe von 2 ... 4,6 nm). Entgegen der intuitiven Erwartung hat eine höhere Adsorptionszeit keinen Einfluss auf die Diffusionszone. Der limitierende Faktor ist die Diffusionszone selbst. In Übereinstimmung mit der theoretischen Erwartung führt die Diffusion von kurzen PSS-Ketten während der Multischicht-Präparation zu einem exponentiellen Wachstum der PDADMA/PSS-Multischichten, sobald Mw(PSS) < 25 kDa. In diesem Fall durchläuft das Schichtwachstum nacheinander erst ein exponentielles, dann ein parabolisches und schließlich ein lineares Regime.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Katodenregion einer quecksilberfreien Helium-Xenon Niederdruckentladung im Brennfleckbetrieb experimentell untersucht. Diese Region ist von besonderem Interesse, da sich hier die Elektronenemission, die Erzeugung von Ionen und metastabilen Atomen sowie lebensdauerbegrenzende Prozesse abspielen. Um die Entladung im Brennfleckbetrieb zu realisieren, kam als Katode eine im Rahmen dieser Arbeit entwickelte neuartige planare Geflechtelektrode zum Einsatz. Mit der Methode der ortsaufgelösten Laser-Atom-Absorptionsspektroskopie (LAAS) wurden die absoluten Teilchendichten der zwei untersten angeregten Xe-Atome und die Gastemperatur in der Katodenregion bestimmt. Die Inhomogenität des Spot-Plasmas fand dabei besondere Berücksichtigung. Sowohl die Teilchendichten der zwei untersten angeregten Xe-Atome als auch die Gastemperatur sind unmittelbar vor dem Brennfleck maximal und fallen in axiale und radiale Richtung stark ab. Insbesondere die Gastemperatur beträgt in einem Abstand von 1 mm vor dem Brennfleck circa 650 K und liegt damit deutlich über Raumtemperatur. Des Weiteren ließ sich die Temperatur im Brennfleck auf der Katodenoberfläche mittels optischer Emissionsspektroskopie ermitteln. Dies geschah durch Anpassung des aufgenommenen Spektrums an die Plancksche Strahlungsgleichung. Die Brennflecktemperaturverteilung weißt ein ausgeprägtes Maximum auf, das je nach Entladungsstromstärke maximale Werte zwischen 1414 K bei 40 mA und 1524 K bei 80 mA annimmt. Von diesem Maximum aus wurde ein starker in alle Richtungen nahezu symmetrischer Temperaturabfall festgestellt. Ein technologisch wichtiger Aspekt hinsichtlich der Lebensdauer einer auf Xenon basierenden quecksilberfreien Lampe ist der negative Effekt der Xe-Gasaufzehrung. In dieser Arbeit wird gezeigt, dass die Gasaufzehrung unter Verwendung der planaren Geflechtelektrode im deutlichen Gegensatz zur industriell gefertigten Becherelektrode, wie sie vielfach in Lampen für Lichtwerbung vorkommt, vernachlässigbar klein ist. Dies wird auf die Ausbildung eines heißen Brennflecks und die damit verbundene hohe Katodentemperatur und niedrige Katodenfallspannung zurückgeführt.
In this work, the investigation of dusty plasma by means of tunable diode laser spectroscopy was carried out. Special interest was focused on the interactions of dust particles and metastable atoms. At first, Al density and temperature in dc and pulsed magnetron discharges were measured. Measurements with argon as working gas show an expected behavior of the measured atom density and temperature. Decrease of absorption signal was observed in argon/oxygen and argon/methane mixtures. A small admixture of oxygen leads to a complete disappearance of the absorption signal indicating vanishing Al atom density. The effect is believed to be caused by the oxidation of the magnetron target. This decrease reveals typical hysteresis behavior caused by poisoning of the target. Significant difference between critical oxygen flow value in dc and pulsed modes was registered. Then dust formation and plasma behaviors in hydrocarbon containing plasmas were analysed. The dust growing plasmas (Ar/C2H2, Ar/CH4 and Ar/C3H6 rf plasmas) were characterized by laser transmission and scattering methods, ion energy distribution function and mass spectrum evolution by plasma processing monitor, and the spatial distribution in pristine plasma and the temporal behavior of the metastable atom density in processing plasma using TDLAS. Pristine plasma were then characterized in term of metastable density and temperature. The radial distribution of neon metastable atom density in capacitive coupled rf discharge can be approximated to a Gaussian profile with the width smaller than plasma chamber radius. The diffusion flow of metastable atoms deduced from their spatial density distribution gives the loss of metastable atom in the plasma sheath. Argon metastable density was measured in rf plasma and compared with a simple model for metastable density. The model explains well the trend of metastable density with respect to the change of plasma input power. Metastable density of dusty plasma with injected dust particles was measured and compared to that of pristine plasma. The particle heating by metastable atoms was strongly evidenced. The power absorbed by dust particles due to bombardment of metastable atoms onto a dust particle surface in our experiments is about 0.04 Wm-2 for the low dust density case and lower for higher dust density which is in the same order as the contributions of kinetic energy of ions and electrons and the energy released by their recombination on the grain surface. The influence of dust particle density and size on metastable density was studied. Through measuring metastable density, TDLAS can be used as a tool to study the dust growth process in processing plasma.
The confinement of energy has always been a challenge in magnetic confinement fusion devices. Due to their toroidal shape there exist regions of high and low magnetic field, so that the particles are divided into two classes - trapped ones that are periodically reflected in regions of high magnetic field with a characteristic frequency, and passing particles, whose parallel velocity is high enough that they largely follow a magnetic field line around the torus without being reflected. The radial drift that a particle experiences due to the field inhomogeneity depends strongly on its position, and the net drift therefore depends on the path taken by the particle. While the radial drift is close to zero for passing particles, trapped particles experience a finite radial net drift and are therefore lost in classical stellarators. These losses are described by the so-called neoclassical transport theory. Recent optimised stellarator geometries, however, in which the trapped particles precess around the torus poloidally and do not experience any net drift, promise to reduce the neoclassical transport down to the level of tokamaks. In these optimised stellarators, the neoclassical transport becomes small enough so that turbulent transport may limit the confinement instead. The turbulence is driven by small-scale-instabilities, which tap the free energy of density or temperature gradients in the plasma. Some of these instabilities are driven by the trapped particles and therefore depend strongly on the magnetic geometry, so the question arises how the optimisation affects the stability. In this thesis, collisionless electrostatic microinstabilities are studied both analytically and numerically. Magnetic configurations where the action integral of trapped-particle bounce motion, J, only depends on the radial position in the plasma and where its maximum is in the plasma centre, so-called maximum-J configurations, are of special interest. This condition can be achieved approximately in quasi-isodynamic stellarators, for example Wendelstein 7-X. In such configurations the precessional drift of the trapped particles is in the opposite direction from the direction of propagation of drift waves. Instabilities that are driven by the trapped particles usually rely on a resonance between these two frequencies. Here it is shown analytically by analysing the electrostatic energy transfer between the particles and the instability that, thanks to the absence of the resonance, a particle species draws energy from the mode if the frequency of the mode is well below the charateristic bounce frequency. Due to the low electron mass and the fast bounce motion, electrons are almost always found to be stabilising. Most of the trapped-particle instabilities are therefore predicted to be absent in maximum- J configurations in large parts of parameter space. Analytical theory thus predicts enhanced linear stability of trapped-particle modes in quasi-isodynamic stellarators compared with tokamaks. Moreover, since the electrons are expected to be stabilising, or at least less destabilising, for all instabilities whose frequency lies below the trapped-electron bounce frequency, other modes might benefit from the enhanced stability as well. In reality, however, stellarators are never perfectly quasi-isodynamic, and the question thus arises whether they still benefit from enhanced stability. Here the stability properties of Wendelstein 7-X and a more quasi-isodynamic configuration, QIPC, are investigated numerically and compared with another, non-quasiisodynamic stellarator, the National Compact Stellarator Experiment (NCSX) and a typical tokamak. In gyrokinetic simulations, performed with the gyrokinetic code GENE in the electrostatic and collisionless approximation, several microinstabilities, driven by the density as well as both ion and electron temperature gradients, are studied. Wendelstein 7-X and QIPC exhibit significantly reduced growth rates for all simulations that include kinetic electrons, and the latter are indeed found to be stabilising when the electrostatic energy transfer is analysed. In contrast, if only the ions are treated kinetically but the electrons are taken to be in thermodynamic equilibrium, no such stabilising effect is observed. These results suggest that imperfectly optimised stellarators can retain most of the stabilising properties predicted for perfect maximum-J configurations. Quasi-isodynamic stellarators, in addition to having reduced neoclassical transport, might therefore also show reduced turbulent transport, at least in certain regions of parameter space.
Experience in the construction of optimized stellarators shows the coil system is a significant challenge. The precision necessary allow the generation of accurate flux surfaces in recent experiments affected both cost and schedule negatively. Moreover, recent experiments at Wendelstein 7-X have shown that small field corrections were necessary for the operation of specific desired magnetic configurations. Therefore, robust magnetic configurations in terms of coil geometry and assembly tolerances have a high potential to facilitate swifter and less expensive construction of future, optimized stellarators. We present a new coil optimization technique that is designed to seek out coil configurations that are resilient against 3D coil displacements. This stochastic version of stellarator coil optimization uses the sampling average approach to incorporate an iterative perturbation analysis into the optimization routine. The result is a robust magnetic configuration that simultaneously reproduces the target magnetic field more accurately and leads to a better fusion performing coil configuration.
This thesis is devoted to experiments on three-dimensional dust clouds which are confined in low temperature plasmas. Such ensembles of highly electrically charged micrometer-sized particles reveal fascinating physics, such as self-excited density waves and vortices. At the same time, these systems are challenging for experimental approaches due to their three-dimensional character. In this thesis, new optical diagnostics for dusty plasmas have been developed and, in combination with existing techniques, have been used to study these 3D dusty plasmas on different size and time scales.
Ausgangspunkt aller Untersuchungen sind Langmuir-Monoschichten an der Wasser/Luftgrenzfläche. Denn mit diesen Monoschichten kann die Oberflächeladungsdichte eingestellt werden. Sie werden durch amphiphile Moleküle gebildet.Die hydrophoben Alkylketten sind zur Luftseite und die hydrophile Kopfgruppe zur Wasserseite orientiert.Die Phasen der Lipid- Monoschicht und die Belegungsdichte werden extern eingestellt. Die Lipid- Monoschicht kann je nach Anordnung der Alkylketten verschiedene unter- schiedliche Phasen zeigen. Um die adsorbierten Polyelekrolyte zu beschreiben zu können, benötigt man experimentelle Methoden, die in der Lage sind, Konformation und Be- legungsdichte von adsorbierten Polyelektrolyten an Oberflächen aufzulösen. Diese Strukturen, auf der Nanometerskala, werden mit Röntgenreflektion und Röntgendiffraktion unter streifendem Einfall untersucht.Die Strukturda- ten werden durch thermodynamische Untersuchungen ergänzt. Die Untersuchungen werden für elektrostatische Kräfte mit hoher Ampli- tude und langer Reichweite durchgeführt. Die Lösungen der Polyelektrolyte (c PSS = 0.01 mmol/L bezogen auf die Monomerkonzentration) sind so einge- stellt, dass eine fast vollständige Ladungskompensation (70-90%) stattfindet. Unter diesen Bedingungen adsorbieren PE entweder flach als 2-dimensionales Knäuel oder geordnet in einer 2-dimensionalen lamellaren Phase. Die Untersuchungen sollen herausfinden, welchen Einfluss die elektrostatische Wechselwirkung auf die Kettensteifigkeit von adsorbierten Polyelektrolyten,die durch die Persistenzlänge LP charakterisiert werden.So kann geklärt werden,ab welcher Konturlänge LK Polyelektrolyte nicht mehr stäbchenförmig sondern als 2-dimensionales Knäuel adsorbieren. Untersucht werden negativ geladene PSS (Polystyron Sulfonat) mit un- terschiedlichen Konturlängen LK.Diese adsorbieren an die positiv geladene DODA Lipid-Monoschicht (Dioctadeyldimethylammonium). Die Persistenzlänge LP für adsorbiertes PSS an DODA ist direkt aus den thermodynamischen Daten ermittelt worden. Als Funktion der Konturlänge LK wurde der Oberflächendruck π c sowie die erste Ableitung dπc /dT unter- sucht. Daraus läßt sich die Persistenzlänge des adsorbierten PSS LP ≈ 210 Å bestimmen. Die Oberflächenladungsdichte der Monoschicht wird durch die Kompression verdoppelt.Simultan wird der Abstand der Polyelektrolytketten dPE halbiert, so dass immer eine 70-90% Ladungskompensation erreicht wird. Es wird mit Röntgendiffraktion immer eine fache 2-dimensionale lamellare Phase der adsorbierten PSS Ketten detektiert.Hierbei bilden Konturlängen LK < 110 Å eine Ausnahme. Es wird keine 2-dimensionale lamellare Phase für geringe Oberflächenladungsdichte (LE Phase der Lipide) gefunden. Die Röntgenreflektion kann aber zeigen, dass PSS Ketten, unabhängig von der Konturlänge LK, immer flach an der Lipidmonoschicht adsorbieren. Wenn steife kurze Ketten (LK≤110Å<LP ) an der LC Phase der Lipid- Monoschicht adsorbieren, liegen sie aber in der 2-dimensionalen lamellare Phase. Der Übergang von der LE in die LC Phase der Lipid-Monoschichten erfolgt gleichzeitig mit dem Übergang von der ungeordneten flachen zur 2- dimensionalen lamellare Phase der adsorbierten kurzen PSS Ketten. Daher zeigt die Enthalpie ∆H des LE/LC Phasenübergangs ein Maximum bei L K =110 Å. Im nächsten Schritt wird die Elektrostatik zwischen der Lipid-Monoschicht und den Polyelektrolyte untersucht.Die maximale Oberflächenladungsdichte der Lipid-Monoschicht wird durch eine Mischung von geladenen DODA und ungeladenen DPPC (Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine) eingestellt. Röntgendiffraktionsmessungen zeigen bis zu einem DODA-Anteil von 75% die Ausbildung einer 2-dimensionalen lamellaren Phase an der LC Phase der Lipid-Monoschicht. Nimmt die maximale Oberflächenladungsdichte weiter ab, so wird keine Bildung der 2-dimensionalen lamellaren Phase beobachtet. Die Abnahme der maximalen Oberflächenladung führt zu einer niedrigen Belegungsdichte und so zu einem größerem Kettenabstand dPE. Die Linienladungsdichte wird durch unterschiedliches P−TrisAAx−rand−AMPS1−x auf 90% oder 50% verringert. Röntgendiffraktionsmessungen an PE mit unterschiedlichen Linienladungsdichten zeigen auch hier eine 2-dimensionale lamellare Phase. Die verringerte Linienladungsdichte erzwingt eine höhere Belegungsdichte um eine 70-90% Ladungskompensation zu erreichen. Dieses führt zu einem kleineren Kettenabstand dPE. Ein Grenzfall ist bei einer 50%-igen Linienladungsdichte zu beobachten. Dort konnte an der LC Phase der Lipid-Monoschicht keine 2-dimensionale lamellare Phase der PE beobachtet werden. Der Kettenabstand dPE ist so gering, dass er mit der Röntgendiffraktion nicht mehr aufgelöst werden kann.
In this thesis, I was able to provide answers to transport processes in lipid monolayers, which are ultimately, all of biological relevance. In particular, I was interested in lipid oxidation and dynamic compression/expansion processes of surfactant monolayers at the air-water interface:
Lipid oxidation was shown to be a consequence of the formation of a high concentration of reactive oxygen species (ROS) during cell respiration, which finally can lead to severe cell damage. It is not yet understood clearly, which part of the lipid molecules is especially prone to a ROS attack. I was particularly interested in the role of the double bonds of the acyl chains of the lipid molecules during oxidation. Further, I wanted to know the time scales of lipid interaction with the ROS.
Compared to lipid vesicles, lipid monolayers have the advantage that many parameters of the system can be adjusted easily. In our system, I made use of this by setting the lateral pressure to low values during H2O2 treatment, which facilitated the ROS to reach the double bonds in the acyl chains.
A prime example of biological systems out of thermal equilibrium was given in the alveolus surface, which is covered with a surfactant monolayer. During breathing, these monolayers undergo such a highly dynamic compression and expansion. Arising flows from breathing could disrupt a film and consequently, it would lose its protective role. One of my goals was to understand flows and their influence on domain shape. Dependent on the strength of the flows, I expected different growth regimes, with differing prevailing transport processes. Once understanding the underlying mechanisms in domain shaping would allow me to draw conclusions on biological systems.
In order to address these questions, I established two systems, both based on the compression of lipid monolayers. I used isotherms to study the phase behavior of the lipids:9 During compression, the lipids can undergo phase transitions from the gaseous phase to the liquid expanded phase (LE-phase) and further from the LE-phase to the liquid condensed phase (LC-phase). A coexistence regime is observed in between the LE-phase and the LC-phase, characterized by a flat increase of lateral pressure with decreasing molecular area. Some lipids exhibited LC-phase domains. These were further investigated with Brewster angle microscopy (BAM). The used BAM was equipped with an integrated Scheimpflug optics, enabling an overall focused image plane. Furthermore, time-resolved observation of the growth of the domains was possible by recording videos (20 frames per seconds).
The first system enabled the investigation of lipid peroxidation, when the lipids were exposed to ROS. I chose DMPC, POPC, DOPC and PLPC, since these are phospholipids differing in the number and position of double bonds in acyl chains, but not in the head group. I used a H2O2 enriched phosphate buffered saline (PBS) solution, which served as a precursor for more reactive ROS, like hydroxyls (.OH). PBS was chosen, since it resembles the cell environment best. During defined waiting times of H2O2 treatment, the ROS diffused vertically from the subphase towards the monolayer. The lipid molecules were in the LE-phase, which facilitated the ROS molecules to reach also the double bonds of the acyl chains. The oxidized monolayers were then compressed at constant compression speed. Since the corresponding isotherms could be measured with high precision, the relative area increase δA/A between oxidized and non-oxidized monolayer along the isotherm proved to be a good measure for lipid peroxidation. The area increase δA in the molecular area of the oxidized molecules was explained by the eventually added, more hydrophilic −OOH group at the position of a carbon atom adjacent to a double bond in the unsaturated acyl chain. The −OOH group is drawn to the hydrophilic head group of the lipid. This leads to a kink in the acyl chain, which increases the molecular area A by δA. A model, which explained this peroxidation process in lipid vesicles, could be adopted to monolayers.
I compared the oxidation of phospholipids, differing in the number and position of the double bonds of their acyl chains. I found that δA/A increased with the growing number of double bonds in one acyl chain. However, a comparison of DOPC with POPC also showed the importance of the position of the acyl chain. I determined a slow reaction kinetic. It could be estimated by a √t dependence of the number density N_surface, which denominates the ROS sticking on the monolayer. The transport of ROS towards the monolayer was found to be diffusive, because it was the slowest process in the reaction. This interpretation was reinforced by a comparison of the temperature dependence of the relative area increase δA/A with the Stokes-Einstein diffusion coefficient of water molecules. The initial ROS concentration c_0 in the trough could be traced back (c_0~ 50 nM), which is indeed a realistic value found in human cells.
Concluding, our results can be understood as a feasibility study. The complexity of the monolayer can be arbitrarily increased, for example by the addition of proteins, allowing the investigation of other oxidative processes occurring in the cell membrane.
The second system allowed the investigation of growth of LC domains during fast compression processes of monolayers. I chose erucic acid monolayers, due to its low line tension and a continuous nucleation phase, enabling the formation of fractal domains. The monolayers were investigated with isotherms and BAM videos. Since v_C (compression speed of the monolayer) was continuous over the whole compression time, I had a system with well-defined hydrodynamic conditions. This allowed me a complete analysis of the system, starting with descriptive features of the observed domains to a classification of the observed growth regimes by means of hydrodynamic theory, through to the distinction and quantification of different kind of flows and supersaturations, involving Ivantsov theory:
Dependent on the compression speed v_C, I observed seaweed or dendritic domains. The LE/LC phase transition pressure pi_t was slightly increased compared to pi_inf of the equilibrium isotherm. A high compression speed v_C induced a supersaturation Δc. I introduced the excess lateral pressure Δpi=pi-pi_inf as an appropriate quantity to describe the supersaturation Δc. I showed a linear behavior of Δc on Δpi. Δc is a macroscopic quantity since it is averaged over the whole monolayer area. I characterized the domains of the seaweed and dendritic regime with respect to tip radii, branch lengths, side branch separations and fractal dimensions. I calculated the growth speed of the main branches. A roughly doubling of the growth speed of dendritic domains, compared to seaweed domains was observed. This was an evidence of adjunctive (Marangoni) flow in the subphase.
For each monolayer, I observed drifts during domain growth, which I explained by an anisotropy in the LE-phase, caused by the continuous nucleation of the domains. These kind of surface flows were superimposed to bulk flows in the subphase. Since I had a well established system, I could analyze the influence of these surface flows on domain shape, in terms of magnitude, direction and duration of the surface flows. I therefore used FFT spectra and directionality histograms. At low flows, the FFT showed six-fold symmetry. Higher drifts exhibited incisions in the FFT, eventually leading to dumbbell shaped FFTs at very high drifts. The domains grew preferentially in the direction parallel to the incision.
I used directionality histograms to analyze the angular distribution of the growing domains. They showed that the drift direction always correlated with a minimum in the histogram. In order to analyze drift duration, I split the domain in downstream and upstream side. I could show that for small drift durations, downstream growth was preferred. However, for longer drift durations, the flows got more isotropic and consequently growth was more balanced then.
I could observe only a weak correlation between drift velocity v_D and compression speed v_C. However, dendrites were formed when the compression speed v_C was high, while seaweed domains were formed when v_C was small. Domain distortion occurred in the same way, independent if seaweed or dendritic domains were considered. I further showed that hydrodynamic flows in the subphase and surface flows are superimposed and scale differently. Consequently, they have different impact on domain shape: hydrodynamic flows act on μm scale and influence the domain morphology (distance between side branches, and tip radius) and the growth speed of the main branches. Surface flows act on the mm to cm scale, cause an anisotropic flow in the LE phase surrounding the domain, and thus affect the overall domain shape.
The anisotropy in the LE-phase led to a locally different degree of supersaturation. To take this into account, I introduced a local normalized supersaturation Δ, based on the Ivantsov solution. Therefore, I calculated Péclet numbers p of measured quantities of the system. I obtained values of 0.88 ≤Δ≤0.90 for the seaweed regime (p<5) and 0.93 ≤Δ≤0.96 for the dendritic regime (p>6). Since the Ivantsov solution can only be applied for purely diffusive processes, I applied a modified Ivantsov solution Δ_mod, which calculates Δ at a distance 𝛿 ahead of the dendrite tip. I was able to determine the progression of the diffusive layer 𝛿, however a quantitative determination failed.
Applying hydrodynamic theory allowed me to classify the two growth regimes with respect to the Boussinesq number Bq. Since for both growth regimes, I achieved values of Bq<1, bulk viscous losses dominated over surface viscous losses. Further, a cross-over length 𝜉 was calculated, from which one can distinguish, whether advective transport dominates over diffusion.
I further connected the two defined supersaturations Δ and Δc via the excess lateral pressure Δpi. From this, I saw differences in the seaweed and dendritic growth regimes: The local normalized supersaturation Δ of seaweed growth seemed to be quite stable for a further increase of the lateral excess pressure Δpi, whereas it reacted quite sensitive in the dendritic regime. This was found to be an indication of a non-equilibrium regime, caused by the strong coupling of the monolayer to the subphase. It reinforces therefore the theory of Marangoni-flow.
The findings of this thesis emphasize the importance of understanding highly dynamic compression/expansion processes arising in surfactant monolayers. Using the example of the compression of the alveolus surface, it can be seen that a more realistic model of the pulmonary alveolus is not only enabled by increasing the complexity of the surfactant monolayer (e.g. by adding specific proteins or lipid mixtures to the monolayer). Equally important is the understanding in transport processes and the consequences for the monolayer structure. By the analysis of domain shapes, I presented a method, which is suitable for such a study.
In the present work, a time- and radial-dependent fluid model has been developed to describe the glow-to-arc transition of the positive column in the course of constriction. The self-consistent model comprises the particle balance equations for the relevant species, the balance equation of the mean electron energy and the heavy particle temperature in the plasma, the Poisson equation for the space-charge potential, and a current balance determining the axial electric field. The model adopts the nonlocal moment method, i.e., the system of the balance equations resulting from the moments of the radially dependent Boltzmann equation is solved. The electron transport and rate coefficients are adapted as functions of the mean energy of the electrons, the gas temperature and the ionization degree. The model is applied to a description of the constriction of the dc positive column in argon, for a wide range of pressures and applied currents. Pronounced nonlocal features of the mean electron energy balance are found and their influence on the constricted argon positive column is analyzed. Different assumptions concerning the electron velocity distribution function (EVDF) have been considered in the present model. The assumption of a Maxwellian distribution for the electrons was found to be inappropriate, while the assumption of a Druyvesteyn distribution for the electrons was found to be suitable for describing qualitatively the glow-to-arc transition. However, the standard model using the EVDF obtained from the solution of the steady-state, spatially homogeneous electron Boltzmann equation including electron-electron collisions allows to describe the constriction effect and provides best agreement with experimental data and other available modelling results. The fluid model has also been used to study a medium-pressure pulsed positive column in xenon at conditions of the contracted discharge. The simulation results provide a detailed insight in the physical mechanisms of xenon discharges in pulsed mode. The stepwise ionization of the excited atoms, the conversion of the atomic ions into molecular ions as well as the dissociative recombination of the molecular ions are found to be the most important processes for the pulsed positive column in xenon plasmas at conditions of the contracted discharge. The comparison of the model predictions with experimental results generally shows good agreement. In particular, the model predictions are suitable for qualitative reproduction of the significant increase of low-lying atomic levels densities as well as of the higher and of the relaxed lowest vibrational states of the Xe2* excimers in the afterglow phase of the pulse.
The present work is the first work dealing with turbulence in the WEGA stellarator. The main object of this work is to provide a detailed characterisation of electrostatic turbulence in WEGA and to identify the underlying instability mechanism driving turbulence. The spatio-temporal structure of turbulence is studied using multiple Langmuir probes providing a sufficiently high spatial and temporal resolution. Turbulence in WEGA is dominated by drift wave dynamics. Evidence for this finding is given by several individual indicators which are typical features of drift waves. The phase shift between density and potential fluctuations is close to zero, fluctuations are mainly driven by the density gradient, and the phase velocity of turbulent structures points in the direction of the electron diamagnetic drift. The structure of turbulence is studied mainly in the plasma edge region inside the last closed flux surface. WEGA can be operated in two regimes differing in the magnetic field strength by almost one order of magnitude (57mT and 500mT, respectively). The two regimes turned out to show a strong difference in the turbulence dynamics. At 57mT large structures with a poloidal extent comparable to the machine dimensions are observed, whereas at 500mT turbulent structures are much smaller. The poloidal structure size scales nearly linearly with the inverse magnetic field strength. This scaling may be argued to be related to the drift wave dispersion scale. However, the structure size remains unchanged when the ion mass is changed by using different discharge gases. Inside the last closed flux surface the poloidal ExB drift in WEGA is negligible. The observed phase velocity is in good agreement with the electron diamagnetic drift velocity. The energy in the wavenumber-frequency spectrum is distributed in the vicinity of the drift wave dispersion relation. The three-dimensional structure is studied in detail using probes which are toroidally separated but aligned along connecting magnetic field lines. As expected for drift waves a small but finite parallel wavenumber is found. The ratio between the average parallel and perpendicular wavenumber is in the order of 10^-2. The parallel phase velocity of turbulent structures is in-between the ion sound velocity and the Alfvènvelocity. In the parallel dynamics a fundamental difference between the two operational regimes at different magnetic field strength is found. At 500mT turbulent structures can be described as an interaction of wave contributions with parallel wavefronts. At 57mT the energy in the parallel wavenumber spectrum is distributed among wavenumber components pointing both parallel and antiparallel to the magnetic field vector. In both cases turbulent structures arise preferable on the low field side of the torus. Some results on a novel field in plasma turbulence are given, i.e. the study of turbulence as a function of resonant magnetic field perturbations leading to the formation of magnetic islands. Magnetic islands in WEGA can be manipulated by external perturbation coils. A significant influence of field perturbations on the turbulence dynamics is found. A distinct local increase of the fluctuation amplitude and the associated turbulent particle flux is found in the region of magnetic islands.
This thesis highlights the impact of surface charges and negative ions on the pre-ionization, breakdown mechanism, and lateral structure of dielectric barrier discharges operated in binary mixtures of helium with nitrogen or electronegative oxygen. Sophisticated diagnostic methods, e.g., non-invasive optical emission spectroscopy and the electro-optic Pockels effect as well as invasive laser photodetachment and laser photodesorption, were applied at one plane-parallel discharge configuration to investigate both relevant volume and surface processes. Moreover, the experimental findings were supported by numerical fluid simulations of the discharge. For the first time, the memory effect of the measured surface charge distribution was quantified and its impact on the local self-stabilization of discharge filaments was pointed out. As well, it turned out that a few additional seed electrons, either desorbed from the charged dielectric surface or detached from negative ions in the volume, significantly contribute to the pre-ionization resulting in a reduced voltage necessary for discharge breakdown. Finally, effective secondary electron emission coefficients of different dielectrics were estimated from the measured breakdown voltage using an analytical model.
This work describes the recent scientific and technical achievements obtained at the high-precision Penning trap mass spectrometer SHIPTRAP. The scientific focus of the SHIPTRAP experiment are mass measurements of short-lived nuclides with proton number larger than 100. The masses of these isotopes are usually determined via extrapolations, systematic trends, predictions based on theoretical models or alpha-decay spectroscopy. In several experiments the masses of the isotopes 252-255No and 255,256Lr have been measured directly. With the obtained results the region of enhanced nuclear stability at the deformed shell closure at the neutron number 152 was investigated. Furthermore, the masses have been used to benchmark theoretical mass models. The measured masses were compared selected mass models which revealed differences between few keV/c² up to several MeV/c² depending on the investigated nuclide and model. In order to perform mass measurements on superheavy nuclei with lower production rates, the efficiency of the SHIPTRAP setup needs to be increased. Currently, the efficiency is 2% and mainly limited by the stopping- and extraction efficiency of the buffer gas cell. The stopping and extraction efficiency of the current buffer gas cell is 12%. To this end, a modified version of the buffer gas cell was developed and characterized with 223Ra ion source. Besides a larger stopping volume and a coaxial injection the new buffer gas cell is operated at a temperature of 40K. The operation at cryogenic temperatures increases the cleanliness of the buffer gas. From extraction measurements and simulations an overall efficiency of 62(3)% was determined which results in an increase by a factor of 5 in comparison to the current buffer gas cell. Aside from high-precision mass measurements of heavy radionuclides the mass differences of metastable isobars was measured to identify candidates for the neutrinoless double-electron capture. Neutrinoless double-electron capture can only occur if the neutrino is its own antiparticle and a physics beyond the standard model exists since the neutrinoless double-electron capture violates the conservation of the lepton number. Due to its expected long half-life this decay has not yet been observed. However, the decay rate is resonantly enhanced if mother and daughter nuclide are degenerate in energy. Suitable candidates for the search of the neutrinoless double-electron capture have been identified with mass difference measurements uncertainties of about 100eV/c². In this work the results of the mass difference measurements of 12 possible candidates are presented.
The absolute density of the metastable N2(A,v=0) molecule was extensively studied in nitrogen barrier discharges at 500 mbar. For the detection of the metastables laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy (LIF) was used, at which for the calibration of the absoute metastables density a comparison with Rayleigh scattering was performed. To get the ratio of the LIF signal to the Rayleigh signal it is shown that the LIF signal is the convolution of the Rayleigh signal with an exponential decay. Besides, the different cross sections are calculated and the ratio of the detection sensitivities at the laser and fluorescence wavelength is determined. As a first step on the way to atmospheric pressure barrier discharges, the laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy was implemented in low pressure capacitively coupled radio-frequency discharges. The determined metastables density in the capacitively coupled radio-frequency discharge is somewhat below 10^12 cm^(-3) at 40 Pa and somewhat below 10^13 cm^(-3) at 1000 Pa. The axial density profiles show a nearly symmetric shape due to the long lifetime of the metastable state. At a pressure of 500 mbar the two discharge modes of the barrier discharge, the filamentary and the diffuse mode, were analysed. The filamentary mode was mainly investigated in an asymmetric discharge configuration. Typical densities in the detection volume are in the range of 10^13 cm^(-3), resulting in maximal densities of up to 10^15 cm^(-3) in the microdischarge channel. Such large densities are in agreement with the fast decay by the pooling reaction after the maximum of the metastables density in the afterglow of the discharge pulse. The time dependent measurements in the afterglow of single microdischarges offer a delay of the metastables production with respect to the discharge current. This delay indicates that the metastables production takes place mostly by cascades from higher triplet states, which are in turn excited by electron impact. The axial density profiles show a maximum in metastables density in front of the anode in agreement with optical emission spectroscopy, but which cannot be clearly identified because of the asymmetric discharge configuration. The measurements for the diffuse discharge mode were performed in a symmetric discharge configuration. The metastables density is in the range of 10^13 cm^(-3). It increases during the current pulse of the discharge and decays afterwards. The maximum of the metastables density is delayed with respect to the maximum of the discharge current. The depletion of metastables in the early discharge afterglow is dominated by the pooling reaction, afterwards quenching by nitrogen atoms becomes important assuming a nitrogen atom density in the order of 10^14 cm^(-3). As for the filamentary mode, the losses by diffusion are negligible for the measurement positions. The measured axial density profiles show an accumulation of metastables in front of the anode, whereas the density in front of the cathode is below the detection limit. To calculate the metastables current density to the dielectrics after the discharge pulse a simulation is developed including the dominant volume processes for the depletion of metastables and the axial diffusion. Starting point for the simulation is the axial metastables density distribution at the end of the discharge pulse. The calculated metastables current density at the dielectrics is in the range of 10^14 cm^(-2)s^(-1). With the use of recently calculated secondary electron emission coefficients a comparison of the secondary electron emission by metastables with the discharge current is done. It is figured out that the secondary electron emission current is large enough to be important during the discharge ignition. To expand the simulation to the whole voltage cycle, the excitation of metastables is assumed to be proportional to the discharge current and electron density. Using this model, the measured time dependences of the metastables density are well reproduced for the investigated parameter variations. This is not the case for the axial profiles, where a metastables loss process is missed to explain the formation of a density plateau in front of the anode during the discharge pulse. The intended calculation of the metastables current density shows that the delay of the metastables production with respect to the discharge current might be responsible for the ignition of microdischarges at the beginning of the discharge pulse.
This thesis contains studies on a special class of topological insulators, so called anomalous Floquet topological insulators, which exclusively occur in periodically driven systems. At the boundary of an anomalous Floquet topological insulator, topologically protected transport occurs even though all of the Floquet bands are topologically trivial. This is in stark contrast to ordinary topological insulators of both static and Floquet type, where the topological invariants of the bulk bands completely determine the chiral boundary states via the bulk-boundary correspondence. In anomalous Floquet topological insulators, the boundary states are instead characterized by bulk invariants that account for the full dynamical evolution of the Floquet system.
Here, we explore the interplay between topology, symmetry, and non-Hermiticity in two-dimensional anomalous Floquet topological insulators. The central results of this exploration are (i) new expressions for the topological invariants of symmetry-protected anomalous Floquet topological phases which can be efficiently computed numerically, (ii) the construction of a universal driving protocol for symmetry-protected anomalous Floquet topological phases and its experimental implementation in photonic waveguide lattices, (iii) the discovery of non-Hermitian boundary state engineering which provides unprecedented possibilities to control and manipulate the topological transport of anomalous Floquet topological insulators.
This work study a monolayer of branched poly(ethyleneimine (PEI) adsorbed onto oppositely charged surfaces with iron chelates or iron ions in the absorption solution. The conformation of adsorbed PEI is explored in the dependence of the composition of the adsorption solution by measuring the surface forces using atomic force microscopy (AFM) with the colloidal probe (CP) at different ionic strengths (INaCl) in surrounding aqueous solution. The surface coverage of these layers is investigated using X-ray reflectivity.
PEI solutions show different pH values with iron chelates (pH = 3), iron ions (pH = 4.67) or pure water (pH = 9.3) at room temperature. Low surface coverage of PEI at pH = 3 adjusted by monovalent ions was also observed. However, adsorbing PEI with iron ions or iron chelates and washing with pure water shifts the pH, leading to an adsorbed PEI layer with high coverage. In our observation, the influence of iron ions and iron chelates on the surface coverage of PEI film is stronger than the pH effect. PEI adsorbed from a pure water solution shows flat conformation. Surface force measurements with CP show that PEI adsorbed from solutions containing iron chelates or iron ions cause almost identical steric forces. The thickness of the brush L is determined as a function of the ionic INaCl in the measuring solution. It scales as a polyelectrolyte brush.
The maximum number density of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) adsorbed onto the PEI brushes was identical and larger than on flatly adsorbed PEI. On the PEI layer with the larger surface coverage, the AuNPs aggregate; on the PEI layer with the lower surface coverage they do not aggregate. Taken together, these results contribute to understanding the mechanisms determining surface coverage and conformation of PEI and demonstrate the possibility of controlling surface properties, which is highly desirable for potential future applications.
In this thesis, we also investigate the top layer (PSS and PDADMA) of polyelectrolyte multilayer (PEM) films. PEM films were prepared by sequential adsorption of oppositely charged PEs on solid substrates. PEM films consist of polydiallyldimethylammonium (PDADMA) as polycation and the polystyrene sulfonate (PSS) as polyanion. PDADMA has a smaller linear charge density than PSS. For this system, two different growth regimes are known: parabolic and linear. I studied the top layer (PSS and PDADMA) conformation of PEM films and how the structure of this top layer is affected by increasing the number of PDADMA/PSS layer pairs N and the addition of salt to the surrounding solution.
The INaCl was changed during the force-distance measurements. PSS terminated films always show electrostatic forces at INaCl < 0.1 M and flat conformation. The surface charge density is always negative at INaCl < 0.1 M. The surface charge of the PSS top layer starts to turn from negative to positive at N ≥ 14. At N between 13 and 15, adsorbed PSS cannot compensate all the excess PDADMA charge. This leads to an accumulation of the positive extrinsic sites within the PSS terminated film beyond a specific N. At INaCl ≈ 0.1 M, an exponential decaying force was measured. This is an indication of unusual long-ranged hydration force (decay length λ-1 ≈ 0.2-0.5 nm), and PSS terminated film shows zwitterionic or neutral surface. At INaCl > 0.1 M, a non-electrostatic action occurs and the PSS terminated film reswells in solution.
PDADMA terminated surface consisting of few layers show a flat conformation and the electrostatic forces were measured. For N ≥ 9 and INaCl ≤ 0.1 M, steric forces were measured. The force-distance profiles are well-explained by Alexander and de Gennes theory. PDADMA chains show a maximum L that is around 40-45 % of the contour length. For INaCl ≈ 0.1 M, and N > 9, a flat, neutral or zwitterionic surface is found (λ-1 ≈ 0.3-0.9 nm). For N = 9 and INaCl > 0.1 M, a strong screening of electrostatic interaction and attractive forces are observed. For N > 9 and INaCl > 0.1 M, the ion adsorption into the PE chains leads to an increase in the monomer size and as a result, the L increases and PDADMA brushes reswell again into the solution.
These data show that by varying N and INaCl, different surface forces can be obtained: Electrostatic forces (flat chains) both positive and negative, steric forces (brush), hydration force (flat, neutral or zwitterionic surface), and effects not yet explained (reswelling brush).
The concept of the electron surface layer introduced in this thesis provides a framework for the description of the microphysics of the surplus electrons immediately at the wall and thereby complements the modelling of the plasma sheath. In this work we have considered from a surface physics perspective the distribution and build-up of an electron adsorbate on the wall as well as the effect of the negative charge on the scattering of light by a spherical particle immersed in a plasma. In our electron surface layer model we treat the wall-bound electrons as a wall-thermalised electron distribution minimising the grand canonical potential and satisfying Poissons equation. The boundary between the electron surface layer and the plasma sheath is determined by a force balance between the attractive image potential and the repulsive sheath potential and lies in front of the crystallographic interface. Depending on the electron affinity x, that is the offset of the conduction band minimum to the potential in front of the surface, two scenarios for the wall-bound electrons are realised. For x<0 electrons do not penetrate into the solid but are trapped in the image states in front of the surface where they form a quasi two-dimensional electron gas. For x>0 electrons penetrate into the conduction band where they form an extended space charge. These different scenarios are also reflected in the electron kinetics at the wall which control the sticking coefficient and the desorption time. If x<0 electrons from the plasma cannot penetrate into the solid. They are trapped in the image states in front of the surface. The transitions between unbound and bound states are due to surface vibrations. Trapping of electrons is mediated by one-phonon transitions and takes place in the upper bound states. Owing to the large binding energy of the lowest bound state transitions from the upper bound states to the lowest bound state are due to multi-phonon processes. For low surface temperatures relaxation to the lowest bound state takes place while for higher temperature a relaxation bottleneck emerges. Desorption occurs in cascades for systems without relaxation bottleneck and as a one-way process in systems with a relaxation bottleneck. From the perspective of plasma physics the most important result is that the sticking coefficient for electrons is relatively small, typically on the order of 0.001. For x>0 electron physisorption takes place in the conduction band. For this case sticking coefficients and desorption times have not been calculated yet but in view of the more efficient scattering with bulk phonons, responsible for electron energy relaxation in this case, we expect them to be larger than for the case of x<0. Finally, we have studied the effects of surplus electrons on the scattering of light by a spherical particle. For x<0 the electrons form a spherical electron gas around the particle and their electrical conductivity modifies the boundary condition for the magnetic field. For x>0 the electrons in the bulk of the particle modify the refractive index through their bulk electrical conductivity. In both cases the conductivity is limited by scattering with surface or bulk phonons. Surplus electrons lead to an increase of absorption at low frequencies and, most notably, to a blue-shift of an extinction resonance in the infrared. This shift is proportional to the charge and is strongest for submicron-sized particles. The particle charge is also revealed in a blue-shift of the rapid variation of one of the two polarisation angles of the reflected light. From our work we conclude that the electron affinity is an important parameter of the surface which should affect the charge distribution as well as the charge-up. Therefore, we encourage experimentalists to study the charging of surfaces or dust particles as a function of x. Interesting in this respect is also if or under what conditions the electron affinity of a surface exposed to a plasma remains stable. Moreover, we suggest to use the charge signatures in Mie scattering to measure the particle charge optically. This would allow a charge measurement independent of the plasma parameters and could be applied to nano-dust where conventional methods cannot be applied.
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.
In this thesis, a stereoscopic camera system is presented that is designed for the use on parabolic flights for the investigation of dusty plasmas under microgravity conditions. This camera system consists of three synchronously triggered high-speed cameras observing a common volume of approximately (15 × 15 × 15) mm³ size. In this volume, the three-dimensional trajectories of a large number of particles surrounded by a dense dust cloud were reconstructed. For this task an intricate set of reconstruction algorithms has been developed, including a four-frame linking algorithm and a complex combined 2D/3D tracking algorithm for a reliable tracking of 3D particles. Furthermore, these algorithms effectively suppress so-called ghost particles in the evaluation process which are reconstructed from falsely identified 2D particle correspondences. Dusty plasmas under microgravity conditions are of special interest due to their complex structure and the variety of observable dynamic phenomena. Under typical discharge conditions, a central dust-free void is formed, surrounded by a dense particle cloud. Since the void is inherently dust-free, particles shot into the void can be uniquely identified and used to probe plasma properties inside this region. In the dust cloud itself, processes like self-excited dust-density waves can be observed under suitable experimental conditions. Using the presented camera setup and reconstruction algorithms, two parts of a dusty plasma under microgravity on parabolic flights are investigated. Initially, the force field creating and sustaining the central void is deduced and characterized. The combination of ion drag and electric field force is measured and compared to current models of the ion drag, showing a good agreement with these models. While previous investigations on the forces were limited to two-dimensional slices through the void, our measurements represent the first three-dimensional quantitative analysis of a large fraction of the void region. From this analysis the structure of the force field is determined and separated into a radial and a non-radial (or orthogonal) contribution. It is shown that the radial contribution dominates in the central void, while non-radial forces increase in magnitude close to the void edge. The radial domination is also observed in the velocity distribution of the probe particles which is significantly shifted to radially outward directed velocities for particles leaving the void. Assuming a strictly radial force profile in the horizontal mid-plane of the void, the friction coefficient determining the interaction of the probe particles with the neutral gas background is experimentally determined and shown to match the theoretical expectation. Subsequently, particles at the outer surface of the dust cloud are reconstructed. There, the particles are found to oscillate due to dust-density waves propagating through the high-density dust cloud. For the investigation of the correlation between waves and oscillating particles, the instantaneous wave and oscillation properties are determined and the instantaneous phase difference is obtained. Modeling the probe particles as driven, damped harmonic oscillators, these phase differences between waves and particles are interpreted with respect to the resonance frequency of the oscillating particles. Spatial variations of the phase difference are observed that may be attributed to different frequencies of the dust-density waves, or to changes of the resonance frequency induced by changing local plasma parameters. From a few measurements of particles oscillating at their resonance frequency, information about the surrounding plasma or properties of the particles themselves can be deduced. However, a larger number of reconstructed trajectories is necessary in order to interpret the phase differences on a reliable data basis. The presented camera setup in combination with the evaluation algorithms is a flexible system for the investigation of three-dimensional dusty plasmas. Its robust construction allows the operation of the system in challenging environments such as on parabolic flights, where spatial limitations and vibrations produced by the aircraft make special demands on such a diagnostic tool. This versatility makes our stereoscopic camera setup and the reconstruction process a suitable standard diagnostic for the application with dusty plasmas; this system will therefore be used in future research amongst other things for the investigation of boundary layers in extended three-dimensional dust clouds under microgravity.
In this work, 2-dimensional measurements in the THz frequency range with self-made spintronic THz emitters were presented. The STE were used to optimize the spatial resolution and determine the magnetization in geometric shapes. At the beginning, various combinations of FM and NM layers were produced and measured to achieve an optimal composition of the STE. The layer thickness of the ferromagnetic CoFeB layer and the nonmagnetic PT layer was also varied. The investigations have shown that a layer combination of 2 nm thick CoFeB and 2 nm thick Pt, applied to a fused silica glass substrate and covered with a 300 nm thick SiO2 layer, emits the highest THz amplitude. Based on these, a structured sample, consisting of an STE and an additional layer system of 5 nm Cr and 100 nm Au, was produced. Further, three wedge-shaped structures were removed from the gold layer by an etching process so that the THz radiation generated by the STE can pass through these areas. This enables the optimization of the resolution of the system. For this purpose, the sample was moved perpendicular to the laser beam by two stepping motors with a step size of 5 μm and imaged 2-dimensionally. By reducing the step size to 0.2 μm, the beam diameter could be measured at the edge of the structure using the knife-edge method. Based on this measurement, the resolution of the system could be determined as 5.1 ± 0.5 μm at 0.5 THz, 4.9 ± 0.4 μm at 1 THz, and 5.0 ± 0.5 μm at 1.5 THz. These results are confirmed by simulations considering the propagation of THz wave packets through the SiO2. The expansion of the FWHM of the waves, passing through the 300 nm thick layer, is about 1%. Only a SiO2 layer with a thickness in the μm range occurs an expansion of around 10%. This shows that it is possible to perform 2-dimensional THz spectroscopy with a resolution in the dimension of the exciting laser beam by using near-field optics. Afterward, the achieved spatial resolution was used to investigate the influence of external magnetic fields on the STE and the emitted THz radiation. By implementing a pair of coils above the sample, an external magnetic field could be applied parallel to the pattern. The used sample was designed in such a way that only certain geometric areas on the fused silica glass substrate were coated with an STE so that THz radiation is emitted only in those areas. The 2-dimensional images show the geometric structures for f = 1.0 THz and f = 1.5 THz clearly. By applying a permanent, positive magnetic field (+M), a positive course of the THz amplitude can be seen. A rotation of the magnetic field by 180° (-M) leads to a reversal of the orientation of the emitted THz radiation, whereby the magnetic field does not influence the corresponding frequency spectrum. By using minor loops, the sample was demagnetized by the constant reduction of the magnetic field strength with alternating magnetic field direction. The 2-dimensional representation of the pattern with a step size of 10 μm shows that the sample was demagnetized since both, positively and negatively magnetized structures, could be imaged. In addition, in the 2nd row from the top, a completely demagnetized circle and a rectangle with a division into two domains can be seen. These structures have both positive and negative magnetized areas, which are separated by a domain wall. To investigate this in more detail a 2-dimensional measurement of the divided regions was made with a step size of 2.5 μm. These images confirm the division of the structures into positive and negative domains, separated by a domain wall, which was verified by Kerr-microscope measurements. Both data show a similar course of the domains and the domain wall. However, to be able to examine the domain wall more precisely using 2-dimensional THz spectroscopy, the resolution of the system must be improved to a range of a few nm, because the expected domain wall width is between 𝑙𝑊 = 12.56 nm and 𝑙𝑊 = 125.6 nm. The improved resolution would make it possible to image foreign objects, such as microplastics in biological cells or tissue. For this purpose, different plastics, such as polypropylene, polyethylene, and polystyrene, were investigated in the THz frequency range up to 4 THz. While no specific absorption could be determined for PP, characteristic absorption peaks were found for PE and PS. The energy of the photons with a frequency of about 2.2 THz excites lattice vibrations in the PE. Therefore, this frequency is specifically absorbed, and the intensity in the transmission spectrum is lower than for other frequencies. PS absorbs especially THz radiation with a frequency of 3.2 THz. In addition, all of the investigated plastics are mostly transparent for THz radiation, which makes imaging of these materials feasible. Based on these basic properties, it will be possible to image and identify these types of plastic.
In this thesis, size-sensitive phenomena of three-dimensional dust crystals emerged in a low temperature plasma are presented. Depending on the number of particles in the system phase transitions, collective vortex motions and large-scaled expansions can be observed. To investigate these fascinating effects an advanced experimental setup as well as new evaluation methods have been developed. This thesis will present these new techniques and the gained insights.
There is a wide variety of Alfvén waves in tokamak and stellarator plasmas. While most of them are damped, some of the global eigenmodes can be driven unstable when they interact with energetic particles. By coupling the MHD code CKA with the gyrokinetic code EUTERPE, a hybrid kinetic-MHD model is created to describe this wave–particle interaction in stellarator geometry. In this thesis, the CKA-EUTERPE code package is presented. This numerical tool can be used for linear perturbative stability analysis of Alfvén waves in the presence of energetic particles. The equations for the hybrid model are based on the gyrokinetic equations. The fast particles are described with linearized gyrokinetic equations. The reduced MHD equations are derived by taking velocity moments of the gyrokinetic equations. An equation for describing the Alfvén waves is derived by combining the reduced MHD equations. The Alfvén wave equation can retain kinetic corrections. Considering the energy transfer between the particles and the waves, the stability of the waves can be calculated. Numerically, the Alfvén waves are calculated using the CKA code. The equations are solved as an eigenvalue problem to determine the frequency spectrum and the mode structure of the waves. The results of the MHD model are in good agreement with other sophisticated MHD codes. CKA results are shown for a JET and a W7-AS example. The linear version of the EUTERPE code is used to study the motion of energetic particles in the wavefield with fixed spatial structure, and harmonic oscillations in time. In EUTERPE, the gyrokinetic equations are discretized with a PIC scheme using the delta-f method, and both full orbit width and finite Larmor radius effects are included. The code is modified to be able to use the wavefield calculated externally by CKA. Different slowing-down distribution functions are also implemented. The work done by the electric field on the particles is measured to calculate the energy transfer between the particles and the wave and from that the growth rate is determined. The advantage of this approach is that the full magnetic geometry is retained without any limiting assumptions on guiding center orbits. Extensive benchmarks have been performed to test the new CKA-EUTERPE code. Three tokamak benchmarks are presented, where the stability of TAE modes are studied as a function of fast particle energy, or in one case as a function of the fast particle charge. The benchmarks show good agreement with other codes. Stellarator calculations were performed for Wendelstein 7-AS and the results demonstrate that the finite orbit width effects tend to be strongly stabilizing.
Modern space missions depend more and more on electric propulsion devices for in-space
flights. The superior efficiency by ionizing the feedgas and propelling them using electric
fields with regard to conventional chemical thrusters makes them a great alternative. To
find optimized thruster designs is of high importance for industrial applications. Building
new prototypes is very expensive and takes a lot of time. A cheaper alternative is to rely
on computer simulations to get a deeper understanding of the underlying physics. In order
to gain a realistic simulation the whole system has to be taken into account including the
channel and the plume region. Because numerical models have to resolve the smallest time
and spatial scales, simulations take up an unfeasible amount of time. Usually a self-similarity
scaling scheme is used to greatly speed up these simulations. Until now the limits of this
method have not been thoroughly discussed. Therefore, this thesis investigates the limits
and the influence of the self-similarity scheme on simulations of ion thrusters. The aim
is to validate the self-similarity scaling and to look for application oriented tools to use
for thruster design optimization. As a test system the High-Efficiency-Multistage-Plasma
thruster (HEMP-T) is considered.
To simulate the HEMP-T a fully kinetic method is necessary. For low-temperature plasmas,
as found in the HEMP-T, the Particle-in-Cell (PIC) method has proven to be the best
choice. Unfortunately, PIC requires high spatial and temporal resolution and is hence
computationally costly. This limits the size of the devices PIC is able to simulate as well
as limiting the exploration of a wider design space of different thrusters. The whole system
is physically described using the Boltzmann and Maxwell equations. Using these system
of equations invariants can be derived. In the past, these invariants were used to derive a
self-similarity scaling law, maintaining the exact solution for the plasma volume, which is
applicable to ion thrusters and other plasmas. With the aid of the self-similarity scaling
scheme the computation cost can be reduced drastically. The drawback of the geometrical
scaling of the system is, that the plasma density and therefore the Debye length does not
scale. This expands the length at which charge separation occurs in respect to the system
size. In this thesis the limits of this scaling are investigated and the influence of the scaling
at higher scaling factors is studied. The specific HEMP-T design chosen for these studies is
the DP1.
Because the application of scaling laws is limited by the increasing influence of charge separation with increased scaling, PIC simulations still are computationally costly. Another approach to explore a wider design space is given using Multi-Objective-Design-Optimization
(MDO). MDO uses different tools to generate optimized thruster designs in a comparatively
short amount of time. This new approach is validated using the PIC method. During this
validation the drawback of the MDO surfaces. The MDO calculations are not self-consistent
and are based on empirical values of old thruster designs as input parameters, which not
necessarily match the new optimized thruster design. By simulating the optimized thruster
design with PIC and recalculate the former input parameters, a more realistic thruster design is achieved. This process can be repeated iteratively. The combination of self-consistent
PIC simulations with the performance of MDO is a great way to generate optimized thruster
designs in a comparatively short amount of time. The proof of concept of such a combination
is the pinnacle of this thesis.
Diese Arbeit widmet sich dem Nachweis und der Analyse lateraler Strukturen in molekular dünnen Polyelektrolytschichten an der Luft-Wasser-Grenzfläche. Sie dient insbesondere der Suche nach den Parametern, welche zu Bildung und Zerfall solcher Strukturen führen sowie deren Eigenschaften beeinflussen. Im Zentrum des Interesses stehen dabei zwei sich in geometrischer Hinsicht unterscheidende Systeme: Flach adsorbierte Polyelektrolyte und senkrecht zur Oberfläche ausgerichtete Ketten in Polyelektrolytbürsten. Die zu charakterisierenden Schichten werden durch Spreiten geeigneter Lösungen auf der Wasseroberfläche präpariert und anschließend systematisch veränderten Bedingungen ausgesetzt. Als universelles Werkzeug kommt dabei die Filmwaage zum Einsatz. Sie wird einerseits zur Untersuchung der thermodynamischen Eigenschaften der Schichten verwendet, andererseits können gezielt Umgebungsbedingungen, wie molekulare Fläche, Lateraldruck, Temperatur oder Ionengehalt der Wassersubphase, eingestellt und für die Dauer der strukturanalytischen Messungen aufrecht erhalten werden. Die Charakterisierung des Elektronendichteprofils senkrecht zur Oberfläche erfolgt durch Messung der einfallswinkelabhängigen Intensität spekular reflektierter Röntgenstrahlen. Örtliche Periodizitäten in der Oberflächenebene werden mittels Röntgendiffraktion bei streifendem Einfall aufgelöst. Bei Adsorption des anionischen Polyelektrolyts PSS (Polystyrolsulfonat) aus einer Lösung mit geringer Monomerkonzentration (0.001 bis 1 mmol/l) heraus an eine Monoschicht des kationischen Lipids DODAB (Dioctadecyldimethylammonium Bromid) können sowohl in flüssiger als auch in kondensierter Lipidphase Braggpeaks beobachtet werden, die parallel ausgerichteten Polyelektrolytketten zuzuordnen sind. Damit gelingt erstmals der experimentelle Nachweis der theoretisch vorhergesagten, elektrostatisch stabilisierten, zweidimensionalen lamellaren Phase semiflexibler Polyelektrolytketten. Der Flächenanteil der Bereiche mit parallel ausgerichteten Ketten nimmt bei steigender Monomerkonzentration ab und verschwindet für Monomerkonzentrationen >1 mmol/l. Als zerstörerisch für die zweidimensionale lamellare Phase erweisen sich kurzreichweitige attraktive Kräfte, deren Beiträge mit zunehmender Belegungsdichte und abnehmendem Kettenabstand steigen und die sogar zur Aggregation der Ketten führen können. Zur Erforschung der kurzreichweitigen attraktiven Kräfte sind Polyelektrolytbürsten mit ihren vertikal zur Oberfläche gestreckten Ketten geeignet. Die Bürsten bestehen aus den in die Subphase ragenden anionischen Polyelektrolyten (PSS136 bzw. PAMPS158), welche mit einem Ende an einen flüssigen hydrophoben Ankerblock (PEE144 bzw. PBA76) kovalent gebunden sind. Durch laterale Kompression und Expansion der hydrophoben Schicht kann die Dichte der Ankerpunkte, die ein zweidimensionales hexagonales Gitter bilden, eingestellt werden. Die Ketten formen dabei bündelförmige Aggregate, deren Form und Größe vom Ionengehalt in der wässrigen Subphase abhängt. Bei Erhöhung der Konzentration monovalenter Kationen sind zwei gegenläufige Trends zu beobachten: Der Durchmesser der Bündel vergrößert sich durch steigende Zahl aggregierter Ketten während die Länge der Bündel abnimmt. Beide Effekte sind Folge der durch die Kationen abgeschwächten inter- und intramolekularen elektrostatischen Repulsion. In der osmotischen Bürstenphase mit monovalenten Na+- und Cs+-Gegenionen sind für beide Polyelektrolyte zwei Ketten pro Bündel zu beobachten. Die Länge der Bündel reduziert sich bei Monolayerkompression von 50 Angström auf 25 Angström. In der Salzbürstenphase steigt die Zahl der aggregierten Ketten auf 17 und die Länge bleibt konstant bei 20 Angström, vergleichbar mit der Persistenzlänge einer neutralen Polystyrolkette im Wasser. Divalente Kationen bewirken ionenspezifische Effekte. Bei Austausch von Ca2+ mit Sr 2+ verdoppelt sich die Anzahl der Ketten pro Bündel von 4 auf 8 für PEE144PSS136 bzw. von 2 auf 4 für PBA76PAMS158. Die Länge der Bündel beträgt rund 20 Angström und ist unabhängig von der Ionen- und Polyelektrolytsorte. Bestimmend für die Bündelbildung ist die Balance zwischen langreichweitiger elektrostatischer Repulsion und kurzreichweitiger Attraktion. Die Elektrostatik wird durch die Kettenladungen und die Ionenstärke der Gegenionen beeinflusst. Als anziehende Komponente kommen hydrophober Effekt und/oder van-der-Waals-Kräfte in Frage. Im Gegensatz zu monovalenten Ionen können divalente Kationen darüber hinaus weitere attraktive Beiträge vermitteln.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Wechselwirkung reaktiver Sauerstoffspezies (ROS) mit organischen Molekülen anhand zweier unterschiedlicher Systeme analysiert. Während einerseits der Einfluss von ROS auf eine organische Monoschicht am Beispiel des synthetischen, kationischen Polyelektrolyten Polyethylenimin (PEI) untersucht wurde, stand andererseits die Wechselwirkung von ROS mit einem DNS-Molekül, dem Biopolyelektrolyten pBR322 im Fokus des Interesses. Für die Untersuchungen der ROS-PEI-Wechselwirkung wurde zunächst verzweigtes PEI flach (RMS-Rauigkeit < 1 nm) auf einem Silizium-Substrat adsorbiert. Mit Hilfe der Fenton-Reaktion wurde die PEI-Monoschicht dem Einfluss von ROS ausgesetzt. Anhand von Kraft-Abstands-Kurven (KAK) konnte gezeigt werden, dass die flache Konformation der PEI-Monoschicht nach dem ROS-Einfluss erhalten bleibt. Des Weiteren konnte mittels Adsorption negativ geladener Gold-Nanopartikel (AuNP) demonstriert werden, dass die PEI-Oberfläche auch nach der Wechselwirkung mit ROS positiv geladene Gruppen enthält. Darüber hinaus konnte mit Hilfe der KAK gezeigt werden, dass sowohl die Oberflächenladungsdichte (OFL) als auch das Oberflächenpotential (OFP) unter ROS-Einfluss um einen Faktor 0,5 reduziert wurden. Es wurde gezeigt, dass die Reduzierung von OFL bzw. OFP auf die Abspaltung positiv geladener Gruppen der PEI-Monoschicht zurückgeführt werden kann. Mit Hilfe der dreidimensionalen Kraftspektroskopie wurde gezeigt, dass OFL und OFP auf einer Längenskala von 1,8 bis 30 µm lateral homogen sind. Darüber hinaus wurde anhand der AuNP-Belegungsdichte demonstriert, dass die Ladungsträger innerhalb der PEI-Oberfläche auf einer Längenskala oberhalb von 36 nm homogen verteilt sind. Hinsichtlich kleiner Längenskalen (< 36 nm) kann konstatiert werden, dass aufgrund einer verzögerten Adsorptionskinetik der AuNP nach der ROS-PEI-Wechselwirkung mit einer partiell reduzierten Bindungswahrscheinlichkeit zu rechnen ist. Vermutlich bewirkt der ROS-Einfluss eine inhomogene Verteilung der positiven Ladungsträger innerhalb der PEI-Monoschicht auf einer Längenskala von einigen nm. Experimentell ergibt sich darüber hinaus, dass eine 50 %ige Reduzierung des PEI-Oberflächenpotentials einer Abnahme von etwa 10 % der maximalen, anteiligen AuNP-Belegungsdichte entspricht. Diese experimentell bestimmten Parameter konnten unter Einbeziehung eines erweiterten drei-Körper RSA-Modelles erklärt werden. Im zweiten Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde eine neue Methode der Quantifizierung ROS-induzierter DNS-Schäden eingeführt. Dazu wurden die DNS-Moleküle zunächst mittels Fenton-Reaktion dem Einfluss von ROS ausgesetzt, auf Polyallylamin-Hydrochlorid-funktionalisiertem Glimmer adsorbiert und mittels des RKM im intermittierenden Modus (RKM-IM) abgebildet. Die Klassifizierung der DNS-Moleküle erfolgt unter Berücksichtigung des Kettenhöhenunterschiedes von doppelsträngiger- (dsDNS) und einzelsträngiger (esDNS) DNS. Als ROS-induzierter DNS-Schaden wird hierbei der Konformationsübergang von dsDNS (intakt) in esDNS (defekt) identifiziert. Die zentrale Messgröße der vorgestellten Methode ist demnach die DNS-Kettenhöhe, welche sich im Falle immobilisierter DNS-Moleküle mit einer Genauigkeit im Sub-Ångström-Bereich mit Hilfe des RKM-IM bestimmen lässt. Für die automatisierte Quantifizierung der Flächen, welche mit dsDNS respektive esDNS belegt sind, wurde ein Höhengrenzwert-basierter Auswertungs-Algorithmus konstruiert. Neben der Variation der Stärke der ROS-DNS-Wechselwirkung mittels verschiedener H2O2-Konzentrationen innerhalb der Fenton-Reaktion, wurde der Einfluss eines Radikalfängers am Beispiel des Natriumacetats (NaOAc) auf diese Wechselwirkung untersucht. Mit der Quantifizierung der ROS-DNS-NaOAc-Wechselwirkung wurde gezeigt, dass der anteilige DNS-Schaden mit wachsender H2O2-Konzentration zunimmt und mit steigender NaOAc-Konzentration abnimmt. Darüber hinaus wurde die Anwendbarkeit der in dieser Arbeit eingeführten Quantifizierung ROS-induzierter DNS-Schäden mit Hilfe eines reaktionskinetischen Ansatzes unter Verwendung des Modelles der kompetitiven Hemmung analysiert. Auf diese Weise wurden Ratenkonstanten der Wechselwirkung zwischen NaOAc mit Hydroxylradikalen verifiziert und somit die Validität des eingeführten Konzeptes demonstriert. Des Weiteren ermöglicht die automatisierte Datenanalyse einen vergleichsweise hohen Datendurchsatz und eignet sich daher gut für die Untersuchung der komplexen Wechselwirkung zwischen ROS, Radikalfänger und DNS. Anhand eines Vergleiches mit den etablierten Methoden zur Quantifizierung ROS-induzierter DNS-Schäden ergibt sich unter Einbeziehung des, in dieser Arbeit eingeführten Analyseverfahrens, ein komplementäres Verständnis der ROS-DNS-Wechselwirkung über einen großen Längenskalenbereich.
Quantum-Kinetic Modeling of Electron Release in Low-Energy Surface Collisions of Atoms and Molecules
(2012)
In this work we present a theoretical description of electron release in the collision of atomic and molecular projectiles with metallic and especially dielectric surfaces. The associated electron yield, the secondary electron emission coefficient, is an important input parameter for numerical simulations of dielectric barrier discharges and other bounded low-temperature gas discharges. The available reference data for emission coefficients is, however, very sparse and often uncertain, especially for molecular projectiles. With the present work we aim to contribute to the filling of these gaps by providing a flexible and easy-to-use model that allows for a convenient calculation of the emission coefficient and related quantities for a wide range of projectile-surface systems and the most dominant reaction channels.
Modern cavity QED and cavity optomechanical systems realize the interaction of light with mesoscopic devices, which exhibit discrete (atom-like) energy spectra or perform micromechanical motion. In this thesis we have studied the crossover from the quantum regime to the classical limit of two prototypical models, the Dicke model and the generic optomechanical model. The physical problems considered in this approach range from a ground state phase transition, its dynamical response to general nonequilibrium dynamics including Hamiltonian and driven dissipative chaotic motion. The classical limit of these models follows from the classical limit of at least one of its subsystems. The classical equations of motion result from the respective quantum equations through the application of the semiclassical approximation, i.e., the neglect of quantum correlations. The approach of the results from quantum mechanics to the prediction of the classical equations can be obtained by subsequently decreasing the respective scaling parameter. In order to obtain exact results we have utilized advanced numerical methods, e.g., the Lanczos diagonalization method for ground state calculations, the Kernel Polynomial Method for dynamical response functions, Chebyshev recursion for time propagation, and quantum state diffusion for open system dynamics. We have studied the quantum phase transition of the Dicke model in the classical oscillator limit. Our work shows that in this limit the transition occurs already for finite spin length but with the same critical behavior as in the classical spin limit. We have derived an effective model for the oscillator degrees of freedom and have discussed the differences of both classical limits with respect to quantum fluctuations around the mean-field ground state and spin-oscillator entanglement. In this thesis we have proposed a variational ansatz for the Dicke model which extends the mean-field description through the inclusion of spin-oscillator correlations. The ansatz becomes correct in the limit of large oscillator frequency and in the limit of a large spin. For the latter it captures the leading quantum corrections to the classical limit exactly including the spin-oscillator entanglement entropy. We have studied the dynamics of spin and oscillator coherent states in the nonresonant Dicke model at weak coupling. In this regime periodic collapses and revivals of Rabi oscillations occur, which are accompanied by the buildup and decay of atom-field entanglement. The spin-oscillator wave function evolves into a superposition of multiple field coherent states that are correlated with the spin configuration. In our work we provide a description of the underlying dynamical mechanism based on perturbation theory. Our analysis shows that collapse and revival at nonresonance is distinguished from the resonant case treated within the rotating wave approximation by the appearance of two time scales instead of one. We have extended our study of the Dicke dynamics to the case of increasing spin length, as the system approaches the classical spin limit. We described the emergence of collective excitations above the ground state that converge to the coupled spin-oscillator oscillations observed in the classical limit. With increased spin length the corresponding Green functions thus reveal quantum dynamical signatures of the quantum phase transition. For the dynamics at larger coupling and energy, classical phase space drift and quantum diffusion hinders the direct comparison of quantum and classical observables. As we show in our work, signatures of classical quasiperiodic orbits can be identified in the Husimi phase-space functions of the propagated wave function and individual eigenstates with energies close to that of the quasiperiodic orbits. The analysis of the generic optomechanical system complements our study of cavity QED systems by a quantum dissipative system. In this thesis we have shown for the first time, how the route to chaos in the classical optomechanical system takes place, given as a sequence of consecutive period doubling bifurcations of self-induced cantilever oscillations. In addition to the semiclassical dynamics we have analyzed the possibility of chaotic motion in the quantum regime. Our results showed that quantum mechanics protects the optomechanical system against irregular dynamics. In sufficient distance to the semiclassical limit simple periodic orbits reappear and replace the classically chaotic motion. In this way direct observation of the dynamical properties of an optomechanical system makes it possible to pin down the crossover from quantum to classical mechanics.
Nanoengineering and laser optics allow for the fabrication of a wide range of systems that subject fermionic particles to geometric restrictions. In addition to strong correlations, the fermions may couple to internal or external bosonic fields, such as quantized lattice vibrations or light fields. This thesis considers the theoretical description of two such systems. One is a molecular junction, i.e., a small organic molecule contacted by metallic electrodes or leads. Itinerant electrons induce molecular vibrations and deformations, corresponding to phonon modes of considerable energy. The thesis investigates the effects of this local electron-phonon interaction on the electric and thermoelectric transport through the junction. Starting with an Anderson-Holstein quantum dot model, our ansatz is based on the application of a variational Lang-Firsov transformation that accounts for the polaronic character of the dot state. We solve the steady-state Kadanoff-Baym equations and derive a self-consistent approximation to the polaronic self-energy that accounts for finite densities and multi-phonon scattering processes. The optimal variational parameter is determined numerically by minimizing the thermodynamical potential. This allows a detailed study of the electronic dot spectral function for all interaction strengths and adiabaticity regimes. For instance, we discuss how a voltage dependent polaronic renormalization of the dot-lead coupling and the dot level causes negative differential conductance and novel conductance features. The investigation of the second system is motivated by recent experiments on the Bose-Einstein condensation of excitons in small semiconducting cuprous oxide crystals. At ultra cold temperatures three species of para- and orthoexcitons are caught in stress induced potential traps. Their decay luminescence is the primary method of detection. This thesis considers the thermodynamics of this system in terms of a multicomponent gas of weakly interacting bosons in external potentials. The coupled equations of motion are solved within a Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov-Popov approximation. For typical experimental parameters the density distributions of the interacting species are calculated numerically. Based on the luminescence formula by Shi and Verechaka we discuss, e.g., how the spectrum of the direct decay of thermal paraexcitons may reveal the formation of a nonluminescent paraexciton condensate as well as the spatial separation of strongly repulsive orthocondensates. First results for an extended luminescence theory are presented, which takes into account the polariton effect.
The realistic description of the physical processes in quantum optical systems requires careful investigation of the interplay between quantum dissipation and entanglement generation. In this thesis, we have considered from a microscopical perspective the entanglement generation in semiconductor microcavities at short times, the dissipative evolution of the quantum harmonic oscillator towards a stationary state, and the nonclassical properties of the asymptotic states of different photonic systems. In our description of two-dimensional semiconductor microcavities we showed that two different pump configurations can be used to stimulate parametric scattering processes between polaritons that lead to the generation of internal polariton entanglement. A moving polariton induces an ultrafast electric polarisation as a source of light that serves as a probe of the internal entanglement properties. The identification of the nonclassical correlations of the emitted photons is based on entanglement witnesses that can also be used for the quantification of entanglement, e.g., in terms of the Schmidt number. The simultaneous creation of multiple branch entangled photon pairs renders it possible to generate an arbitrary number of entangled qubit states. By adjusting the number of pump beams and their spectral properties, one can optimize the Bell-type correlations within one ore more of those entangled qubits. Quantum dissipation can be studied in a microscopic setting with the well known model of a central oscillator coupled linearly to a bath of harmonic oscillators. We showed that equilibration of the central oscillator is the generic behaviour, which is prevented only in situations in which the classical oscillator equation of motion possesses undamped oscillatory solutions. Because of its localised spectral function, the infinite linear harmonic chain is an example for this behaviour. Thermalisation of the central oscillator depends on additional conditions. Equipartition of kinetic and potential energies requires the weak damping limit but is independent on the initial condition. The initial bath preparation enters the asymptotic temperature. Essential for the thermalisation of several oscillators is, that the asymptotic temperature is independent of the central oscillator frequency, which is fulfilled if the initial bath energy distribution matches that of a thermal state. Nevertheless, because this condition involves the sum of kinetic and potential energy, full thermalisation is possible in environments with nonthermal individual energy distributions, even in those far from thermal equilibrium. We showed, that even in the absence of full thermalisation the fluctuations of the central oscillator follow a generalised fluctuation dissipation theorem that reduces to the well known thermal result whenever the central oscillator thermalises in the strict sense. Photonic systems such as two-level emitters in a cavity or semiconductor microcavities are employed in quantum optics applications. The realistic theoretical description of the physical processes requires the use of methods from quantum optics as well as fromthe field of quantum dissipation. Our focus was on the correct theoretical description of the emission from systems with strong coupling. The analysis of the light generated by emitters in a cavity reveals a non-trivial dependence of the photon statistics on the light-matter coupling and temperature. Clearly identifiable parameters regimes with sub- and super-Poissonian photon statistics appear at strong and ultrastrong coupling, and lie immediately next to each other. We provided an approximate rule to relate the emission characteristics for a single emitter to those obtained for few emitters under an appropriate scaling of the emitter-cavity coupling. In accordance with this rule, the generation of noncassical light is easier with more emitters. The outright failure of the quantum optical master equation at predicting any of the features observed in the emission statistics shows that using the correct master equation is essential in all situations. Including internal dissipation channels we showed that a continuously driven semiconductor microcavity generates entangled light even at infinitely large times. The entanglement generation is thus robust against decoherence under realistic experimental conditions. Because the pair correlations between polaritons can sustain over long times and distances in these solid-state devices, a microcavity is a highly efficient source of entangled light and therefore well suited for quantum optics applications.
This thesis presents the production of polyanionic clusters within two ion storage devices:
Considering a Penning trap, the accessible range of polyanionic aluminium clusters has been expanded up to the 10th charge state. In particular, abundance curves for clusters with 5 to 9 excess electrons have been measured for the first time and analysed with respect to their lifetime-dependent appearance sizes. These sizes reveal a nearly quadratic dependency on the charge state for experimentally accessible lifetimes.
Additionally, the production of polyanionic clusters has been enabled in a radiofrequency ion trap. Therefore, the transition from a harmonic to a digital 2- and 3-state guiding signal has been investigated with respect to the ion storage. The passing of electrons through the trap during field-free periods of the guiding signal led to the first production of polyanionic clusters within a radiofrequency ion trap.
The rapid neutron-capture or the r-process is responsible for the origin of about half of the neutron-rich atomic nuclei in the universe heavier than iron. For the calculation of the abundances of those nuclei, atomic masses are required as one of the input parameters with very high precision. In the present work, the masses of the neutron-rich Zn isotopes (A=71 to 81) lying in the r-process path have been measured in the ISOLTRAP experiment at ISOLDE/CERN. The mass of 81Zn has been measured directly for the first time. The half-lives of the nuclides ranged from 46.5 h (72Zn) down to 290 ms (81Zn). In case of all the nuclides, the relative mass uncertainty (∆m/m) achieved was in the order of 1E-8 corresponding to a 100-fold improvement in precision over previous measurements.
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.
Plasmapolymerisation mit einem Atmosphärendruck-Mikroplasma-Jet zur Bildung funktioneller Schichten
(2012)
In Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde die Plasmapolymerisation von aminogruppenhaltigen und perfluorierten Kohlenwasserstoffen mit einem Atmosphärendruck Mikroplasma Jet untersucht, mit dem Ziel einer erstmaligen erfolgreichen Abscheidung von Teflon-artigen und aminogruppenhaltigen Schichten. Hierzu wurde ein Versuchsaufbau zur Schichtabscheidung mit einem Mikroplasma-Jet bei Atmosphärendruckbedingungen konzipiert und aufgebaut. Dieser besteht im Wesentlichen aus dem Plasma-Jet und der ihn umgebenden Glaskuppel, welche die Erzeugung definierter Umgebungsatmosphären bei Normaldruck gestattet sowie vor eventuell entstehenden toxischen Reaktionsprodukten schützt. Als erste Aufgabe wurde die Deposition mit den aminogruppenhaltigen Präkursoren Cyclopropylamin (CPA) und Ethylendiamin (EDA) bearbeitet. Es zeigte sich, dass die Abscheidung im selbstorganisierten Jet-Modus möglich war. Die abgeschiedenen Schichten besitzen trotz eines kuppelförmigen Abscheidungsprofils eine homogene chemische Struktur mit einem Stickstoffgehalt von bis zu 20%, wie durch Profilometrie beziehungsweise XPS ermittelt wurde. Es wurden Werte von [NH2]/[C] zwischen 5,5 % und 3 % (EDA) sowie 4 % und 1 % (CPA) erreicht, abhängig von der Behandlungszeit der Substrate und der verwendeten Umgebungsatmosphäre. Die Schutzgasatmosphäre, bestehend aus einem Gemisch aus Stickstoff und Wasserstoff, welche dazu gedacht war die Bildung primärer Aminogruppen zu unterstützen, hatte einen negativen Effekt auf die Abscheidung. Im Vergleich zu einem Prozess an Luft wurde die Depositionsrate halbiert. Weiterhin konnte ein positiver Effekt auf den Anteil der Aminogruppen nur bei CPA festgestellt werden. Bezüglich der chemischen Zusammensetzung der Schichten wird ein erstes Modell der Plasmapolymerisationsreaktionen vorgestellt, welches auf dem wiederholten Vorgang der Abspaltung einer Aminogruppe und der nachfolgenden Reaktion der so entstandenen Radikale basiert. Bei der Bearbeitung der zweiten Aufgabe, der Deposition von fluorierten Plasmapolymer-Schichten, wurde ein spezielles Entladungsregime des Jets entdeckt. Die hierbei identifizierten Konditionen ermöglichten erstmalig die Abscheidung von C:F-Schichten mit einem Atmosphärendruck Jet. Hierbei wurden mit Octafluorcyclobutan (c-C4F8) als Präkursor, mit hohen Wachstumsraten (bis zu 43 nm/s mit N2-Atmosphäre) Schichten erzeugt. In diesen wurde mitttels XPS eine homogene chemische Struktur mit einem [F]/[C]-Verhältnis von 1,4 und einem sehr geringen Gehalt an Stickstoff und Sauerstoff nachgewiesen. Fits des hoch aufgelöst gemessenen C 1s Peaks zeigen einen Vernetzungsgrad von 44 % und ein [CF2]/[CF3]-Verhältnis von rund 1,8. Der statische Wasserkontaktwinkel bei diesen Schichten lag im Bereich von 100° – 135°. Die geforderte Hydrophobie der Schichten wurde damit erreicht. Luft als Umgebungsatmosphäre während des Beschichtungsprozesses führt nicht zu einem überwiegend ätzenden Plasmaprozess, reduziert jedoch die Depositionsrate um Faktor vier. Änderungen der chemischen Zusammensetzung der Schicht im Vergleich zur Schutzgasatmosphäre wurden nicht festgestellt. Die Verwendung von Octafluorpropan (C3F8) als Präkursor ergab nur ein minimales Schichtwachstum unter Schutzgas- und kein Wachstum unter Luft-Atmosphäre. Basierend auf den Beobachtungen anderer Autoren, wurde dies durch für die Plasmapolymerisation ungünstigere Fragmentierung des Präkursors erklärt. Das spezielle Entladungsregime, die eingeschnürte und lokalisierte bogenähnliche Entladung, wird als die Ausprägung einer --Modus Atmosphärendruck Entladung erklärt, bei der das Substrat als zweite geerdete Elektrode fungiert. Hierzu ist eine ausreichende Leitfähigkeit des Substrats notwendig. Anhand eines vereinfachten Ersatzschaltbildes werden die beobachteten Abhängigkeiten von Substratmaterial und Entladungsregime modelliert
Diese Dissertation beschäftigt sich mit der Erzeugung von edelmetallfreien Katalysatoren für die Sauerstoffreduktion in Brennstoffzellen. Dabei wird ein neuartiger, dualer Plasmaprozess entwickelt, aufgebaut und die so-erzeugten Schichten mit verschiedenen elektrochemischen (CV, RDE und RRDE) und strukturanalytischen Methoden (SEM, EDX, IR, XPS, Leitfähigkeit, XRD, NEXAFS, EXAFS und TEM) untersucht. Auf diese Weise ist es erstmalig gelungen edelmetallfreie Katalysatoren mit einem Plasmaprozess herzustellen, ohne dass eine zusätzliche Pyrolyse benötigt wird. Die katalytische Aktivität der Schichten ist außerdem deutlich höher als die von rein chemisch hergestellten Metall–Polypyrrol-Schichten.
The development of innovative coatings with multifunctional properties is an ambitious task in modification of material surfaces. A novel approach is a hybrid method combining the non-thermal plasma processing with nanotechnology for the development of multifunctional surface coatings. The conception of the hybrid coating process is based on three steps: the preparation of a suspension consisting of an organic liquid and functional nanoparticles, the deposition of the suspension as a thin liquid film on the material surface, and the plasma modification of the liquid organic film to achieve a thin solid composite film with embedded nanoparticles demonstrating multifunctional properties and good adherence on the substrate material. In this work the liquid polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) was applied as a model system, and the experimental investigations were focused on the PDMS plasma modification. In particular, the specific role of the different plasma components and the influence of the plasma and processing parameters on the PDMS modification were studied. The applied capacitively coupled radio frequency (CCRF) plasma was analyzed by electric probe measurements and optical emission spectroscopy, whereas the molecular changes in PDMS due to plasma-induced chemical reactions were studied by the Fourier transform infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy. Additionally, the photocatalytic activity of thin composite films consisting of plasma cross-linked PDMS with embedded TiO2 nanoparticles was demonstrated. During the investigation it was found that the CCRF discharge modifies efficiently thin liquid PDMS films to solid coatings. The samples were positioned in the plasma bulk at floating potential. The penetration depth of particles like neutrals, ions, electrons and radicals in the film is strongly limited. The heating of samples in the CCRF discharge is weak to modify PDMS by itself and only the plasma radiation is able to transform the liquid bulk to solid one. It is known that the absorption onset of PDMS lies in the VUV region (below 200 nm). The energetic VUV radiation penetrates into the PDMS film on a thickness from several hundred nanometers to few micrometers and initiates photochemical reactions there. Thus, different gases like Ar, Xe, O2, H2O, air and H2 were tested to provide the strongest VUV emission intensity of the CCRF discharge. Discharge pressure and power were varied for all these gases and it was found that at all conditions the H2 plasma demonstrates drastically stronger emission. Thus, H2 gas was selected for the plasma treatment of liquid PDMS films. The IRRAS analysis revealed the transformation process of PDMS with the degradation of CH3 groups, the formation of new groups like SiOH, CH2 and SiH, the formation of the SiOx material and crosslinking. It was found that the modification effect is not uniform across the film thickness. The top region with an initial thickness up to 100 nm loses all CH3 groups, in the underlying region the CH3 concentration increases gradually from zero to the value for PDMS, if the film was thick enough. The methyl-free SiOx top layer contains also SiOH and SiH groups. Furthermore, the SiH groups are concentrated only in a very thin layer with a thickness below 10 nm. The presence of the unscreened polar SiOSi and SiOH groups on the surface causes the adsorption of H2O from the atmosphere, which was also observed by IRRAS. By means of the spectroscopic ellipsometry it was found out that all above described regions experience a shrinking. The reason is the crosslinking and loss of material. The most shrunken layer is the top SiOx layer with the shrinking ratio (final thickness/initial thickness) of 0.55 - 0.60. Further, this ratio gradually rise up to the value of 0.95 in the deeper region, which has the concentration of CH3 groups of about that for PDMS. After the analysis of all results the depth of effective modification was estimated at 300 400 nm for the most optimal conditions. The optimization of the plasma VUV intensity was realized by variation of discharge pressure and power. The strongest plasma emission at studied conditions provided the irradiance of the sample of ca. 13 mW/cm2. However, such strong radiation causes very strong production rate of the gases. These products leave the modifying film slower as they are produced, what causes their accumulation in there. Their pressure grows up leading to formation of bubbles, which later explode. Finally, the film becomes heavily damaged. To avoid this effect the pressure and the RF power were changed to reduce the irradiance to 6 - 7 mW/cm2. This resulted in the absence of any damages.
The aim of this thesis is to concentrate on the investigation of these ROS&RNS composition distribution and their production pathways in the gas phase produced by a plasma jet. By understanding the physical mechanisms behind the generation of the ROS&RNS a precise tuning and design of the composition distribution in the gas phase can be achieved. One crucial physical parameter is the dissipated power inside the plasma. Only if this parameter is known a meaningful comparison of different feed gas settings is possible. Therefore, a concept for measuring the dissipated power inside the plasma for the modified micro-scaled atmospheric pressure plasma jet( µAPPJ) is designed. Additionally, due to achievements within this thesis it is now possible to ignite a homogeneous discharge in argon and helium within the geometry of the µAPPJ. The used feed gas is a determining factor concerning the electron energy distribution function and consequently influencing the production mechanism of the ROS&RNS. First of all, the electrical characterisation of the modified µAPPJ was performed including the alpha-to-gamma transition. It is shown that the alpha-to-gamma transition power is increasing with increasing frequency. For the first time it is now feasible to investigate the influence of the dissipated power on the neutral gas temperature, the metastable atom densities and the ROS&RNS production for the modified µAPPJ with argon and helium as feed gas. Due to the possibility of changing the feed gas and controlling the dissipated power a fundamental insight into the production mechanism of the ROS&RNS generated by the plasma jet is achieved. With rising dissipated power the temperature and the metastable densities as well as the ozone and nitrogen dioxide concentrations are increasing. By adding molecular oxygen and nitrogen to the feed gas of a plasma jet the ROS&RNS composition can be tuned. However, also the dissipated power is changed by the small amount of admixtures. Due to the developed dissipated power measurements within this thesis it was possible to disentangle the influence of the admixture on the power and on the ROS&RNS production. If the dissipated power is fixed for the µAPPJ with argon and helium feed gas, respectively, the highest amount of ozone was measured with oxygen admixture in an argon discharge, the highest amount of dinitrogen pentoxide with nitrogen admixture in an argon discharge and the highest amount of nitrogen dioxide with nitrogen admixture in a helium discharge. Beyond the influence of the dissipated power and the molecular admixture on the ROS&RNS production the feed gas temperature is a crucial parameter for the corresponding chemical reactions. By changing this parameter the distribution of ozone and nitrogen dioxide can be tuned precisely in such a way that with increasing temperature the ozone density goes down and the nitrogen dioxide density rises. Another determinant for the ROS&RNS composition produced by an atmospheric pressure plasma jet is the influence of ambient air. If the ambient air is changing from pure nitrogen to pure oxygen atmosphere the ozone density produced by the plasma jet is increasing. For the same conditions the nitrogen dioxide has a maximum at an oxygen-to-nitrogen ratio of 1:1. To avoid the influence of the ambient air on the reactive species production the afterglow of the µAPPJ was prolonged with a glass tube. By increasing the amount of molecular admixtures to the feed gas with each in equal quantities a totally different ROS&RNS composition can be obtained compared without the glass tube. It figures out that for small molecular admixtures the reactive species composition is nitrogen dominated and for higher admixtures it is oxygen dominated. Consequently, by shielding the ambient air from the active effluent and by admixing molecular oxygen and nitrogen the ROS&RNS composition can be designed.
The content of this thesis can be summarized as follows: (i) The deposition processes of SiOx and SiOxCyHz coatings were investigated in a low-pressure, low temperature HMDSO-O2-N2 plasmas. Infrared laser absorption spectroscopy (IRLAS) and optical emission spectroscopy (OES) were combined to measure the gas temperatures in the hot and colder zones of the plasma as well as to monitor the concentration of the methyl radical, CH3, and of seven stable molecules, HMDSO, CH4, C2H2, C2H4, C2H6, CO and CO2. Tunable lead salt diode lasers (TDLs) and an external-cavity quantum cascade laser (EC-QCL) were simultaneously employed as radiation sources to perform the IRLAS measurements. They were found to be in the range between 10^{11} to 10^{15} cm^{−3}. The influence of the discharge parameters of power, pressure and gas mixture on the molecular concentrations was studied. The plasma generation is characterized by a certain degree of inhomogeneity with different temperature zones, i.e., hottest, hot and colder zones depending on the construction of the reactor. This complexity is characterized by the multiple molecular species including the HMDSO precursor and products in ground and excited states existing in the plasma. (ii) Employing similarly IRLAS and OES techniques, the deposition of nanocrystalline diamond at relatively low temperature in low-pressure MW H2 plasmas with small ad-mixtures of methane and carbon dioxide was investigated. Five methods were applied for an extensive temperature analysis, providing new insights into energetic aspects of the multi-component non-equilibrium plasma. The OES method provided information about the gas temperature of H2 inside the MW plasma. Using lead salt diode lasers, the rotational temperature of the methyl radical, CH3 , and gas temperature of methane molecule, CH4 , was measured. A variety of CO lines in the ground and in three excited states have been analysed using an EC-QCL with a relatively wide spectral range. These methods have shown that based on the construction of the DAA reactor using 16 single plasma sources the plasma generation is characterized by a variety of hottest, hot and colder zones. Extensive measurement of these various species temperatures in the complex plasma enabled the concentration determination of the various stable and unstable plasma species, which were found to be in the range between 10 11 to 10 15 cm −3 . The influence of the discharge parameters, power and pressure, on the molecular concentrations has been studied. To achieve insight into general plasma chemical aspects, the dissociation of the carbon precursor gases including their fragmentation and conversion to the reaction products was analysed in detail. The evolution of the concentration of the methyl radical, CH 3 , of five stable molecules, CH4, CO2, CO, C2H2 and C2H4, and of vibrationally excited CO in the first and second hot band was monitored in the plasma processes by in situ infrared laser absorption spectroscopy using lead salt diode lasers (TDL) and an external-cavity quantum cascade laser (EC-QCL) as radiation sources. OES was applied simultaneously to obtain complementary information about the degree of dissociation of the H2 precursor gas. The analysis of the carbon and oxygen mass balances shows clearly, that the deposition on the reactor walls and the production of other hydrocarbons species may act as sinks for carbon and oxygen. (iii) The absolute line strengths of many P-branch transitions of the ν3 fundamental of {28}^SiH4 were determined using the wide tuning range and the narrow line width of a cw EC-QCL between 2096 and 2178 cm^{−1}. The line positions and line strengths of transitions of the stretching dyad within the P-branch of {28}^SiH4 were determined with an estimated experimental measurement accuracy of 10%. The high spectral resolution available has enabled us to resolve and measure representative examples of the tetrahedral splittings associated with each component of the P-branch. The positions of these components are in excellent agreement with spherical top data system (STDS) predictions and theoretical transitions from the TDS spectroscopic database for spherical top molecules. To our knowledge, this is the first reported measurement of these line strengths in this band and is an example of the applicability of high-powered, widely tunable EC-QCLs to high resolution spectroscopy in the MIR. (iv) Similarly, the determination of the silyl radicals, ν3 band, line strengths is ongoing using the same cw EC-QCL. This effort was impaired by silane and other unknown species lines overlap; however, the silyl radicals was successfully detected in a SiH4/H2 plasma. A method to determine the silyl line strengths has been presented through its iterative decay measurements which relied on the value of the silyl radical self reaction constant. There was a consensus of its value in the literature.
In this thesis, the transport properties of topological insulators are investigated. In contrast to trivial insulators, topological insulators possess conducting boundary states which cross the bulk energy gap that separates the highest occupied electronic band from the lowest unoccupied band. The materials used in this thesis are three-dimensional topological insulators with time-reversal symmetry. Their associated helical surface states are protected against elastic backscattering by Kramers degeneracy. The unique properties of the helical surface states can be utilized to generate spin-polarized currents at the surface of topological insulators and to control their propagation direction. This makes them a promising material class for the field of spintronics.
Here, we perform photocurrent scans of topological insulator Hall bar and nanowire devices. From these measurements, we obtained two-dimensional maps of the polarization-independent and helicity-dependent components of the photocurrents.
We find that the polarization-independent component is dominated by the Seebeck effect and thus driven by thermoelectric currents. On the other hand, the helicity-dependent component is driven by the spin-polarized currents that emerge from the topologically non-trivial helical surface states via the circular photogalvanic effect.
First and foremost, our experiments demonstrate that topological insulator nanowires provide a promising platform for the generation of spin-polarized currents, whose direction can be controlled via the helicity of the excitation light. They also highlight the importance of analysing the spatial distribution of the photocurrent, as we observe a strong enhancement of the spin-polarized current and the thermoelectric current at the interface between the nanowire and the metallic contacts. As our analysis shows, the thermoelectric current is enhanced by the Schottky effect and the spin-polarized current is amplified by the spin Nernst effect. In addition, the spin Nernst effect is also present in Hall bar devices and manifest as an enhancement of the spin-polarized current along the Hall bar sides.
Three-dimensionally extended dusty plasmas containing mixtures of two particle species of different size have been investigated on parabolic flights. To distinguish the species even at small size disparities, one of the species is marked with a fluorescent dye, and a two-camera video microscopy setup is used for position determination and tracking. Phase separation is found even when the size disparity is below 5%. Particles are tracked to obtain the diffusion flux, and resulting diffusion coefficients are in the expected range for a phase separation process driven by plasma forces. Additionally, a measure for the strength of the phase separation is presented that allows to quickly characterize measurements. There is a clear correlation between size disparity and phase separation strength.
Molecular dynamics simulations of binary dusty plasmas have been performed and their behavior with respect to the phase separation process has been analyzed. Here as well, it is found that even the smallest size disparities lead to phase separation. The separation is due to the force imbalance on the two species and the separation becomes weaker with increasing mean particle size.
In the second part of the thesis, Experiments on self-excited dust-density waves under various magnetic fields have been performed. For that purpose, different dust clouds of micrometer-sized dust particles were trapped in the sheath of a radio frequency discharge. The self-excited dust-density waves were studied for magnetic field strengths ranging from 0 mT to about 2 T. It was observed that the waves are very coherent at the lowest fields (B < 20 mT). At medium fields (20 mT < B < 300 mT), the waves seem to feature a complex competition between different wave modes before, at even higher fields, the waves become more coherent again. At the highest fields (B > 1 T), the wave activity is diminished. The corresponding wave frequencies and wavenumbers have been derived. From the comparison of the measured wave properties and a model dispersion relation, the ion density and the dust charge are extracted. Both quantities show only little variation with magnetic field strength.
Recent experimental campaigns in the Wendelstein 7-X stellarator, a
plasma-confining device designed to investigate the Magnetic Confinement Fusion
(MCF) approach to generating electrical power, have shown that the injection of
fuelling pellets had an unexpected and considerable impact on the performance of
the plasma. Rather than simply refuelling the device and `diluting' the plasma
energy, pellet injection is followed by a significant increase in the ratio of
the ion temperature to the electron temperature. It has been suggested that this
is not merely due to the improved confinement following the reduction of
turbulent transport after the pellet material has homogenised with the bulk
plasma, but also due to a direct transfer of energy from electrons to ions. The
proposed mechanism for this energy transfer is the ambipolar expansion of the
pellet plasmoid, the localised plasma structure produced by the
ionisation of ablated pellet material, along magnetic field lines.
Early work on pellet plasmoid expansion predicted that half the heating power
deposited in plasmoid electrons by collisions with hot ambient electrons is
transferred to plasmoid ions in the form of flow velocity as the plasmoid
expands. The complicated nature of the system of the pellet plasmoid embedded in
the ambient plasma, particularly the behaviour of electrons, which experience
many collisional and collisionless phenomena on multiple disparate timescales,
means that early models of the expansion were not wholly self-consistent, but
rather made use of strong approximations that apply in some regions of the
plasmoid but not in others. For example, only electrons and ions associated with
the plasmoid were rigorously treated, meaning that the framework was one of
`expansion into vacuum'. Combined with the assumption of Maxwellian electrons,
this led to an electric potential that was unbounded at infinity. Naturally, the
validity of the conclusions of such a model are called into question because the
approximations lose their validity far from the plasmoid and as time advances,
yet predictions about the final state of the plasma are desired. A deeper
investigation is required: careful consideration of the phenomena in question
and the timescales (and lengthscales) on which they act must be made in order to
rigorously construct a model that is valid throughout the entire expansion.
The first two papers presented in this thesis iterate on the model established
in the paper that first predicted the electron-to-ion energy transfer; their aim
was to find out how the character of the expansion changes with a more
sophisticated and accurate description of various phenomena, while remaining
within the existing framework of expansion into vacuum. Ultimately, we find that
the qualitative character is unchanged, and that approximately half the heating
power deposited in plasmoid electrons is transferred to ions.
Two other papers in this thesis address the limitations of the original model.
This is achieved by properly considering the electron kinetic problem in a
plasmoid. One paper considers the electron kinetic problem when electrons are
highly isotropised. In this case the kinetic equation can be integrated to
remove all but two independent variables, which is the maximum possible
reduction considering it is a time-dependent problem. The full nonlinear
integro-differential Landau self-collision operator is integrated exactly and
few approximations are made, leading to a rather general kinetic equation.
However, for fuelling pellets some anisotropy in the electron distribution is
expected. Another paper considers the electron kinetic problem (and the entire
plasmoid expansion) allowing for electron anisotropy. Careful consideration of
the ordering of timescales of electron phenomena in a pellet plasmoid leads to a
steady-state kinetic problem that we call collisional quasi-equilibrium (QE). QE
appears in many ways similar to the collisional steady-state characterising a
true thermal equilibrium. It was found that the time-dependent kinetic problem
of the earlier paper, with isotropic electrons, produces the QE distribution
function, corroborating the existence of the QE state. We then take moments of
the electron kinetic equation that is valid on the expansion timescale, assuming
that the electron distribution is that given as the solution to the QE kinetic
problem. This is completely analogous to what is done to obtain the Braginskii
equations or any Chapman-Enskog theory. The result is a set of equations for the
long-term evolution of the macroscopic quantities that describe the distribution
function existing in a quasi-steady-state at each point in time. It is from this
point that one may feasibly describe the plasmoid expansion with an accurate
picture of the electron kinetics and finally obtain the electron-to-ion energy
transfer so desired in a rigorous model of the expansion.
From a broader point of view, the two frameworks provided by these rigorous
investigations of the electron kinetic problem serve as a basis for the future
study of plasmoids. Such a `first-principles' approach to plasmoid dynamics is
novel and interesting in its own right, but it will be demonstrated that such an
approach is essential for pellet plasmoids owing to the fact that they are
poorly described by the `standard tools' of plasma physics.
Using the QE framework it was found that, once more, about half the heating
power experienced by plasmoid electrons is transferred to plasmoid ions. The
incredible robustness of the prediction of such an energy transfer is, in the
author's opinion, the result of the self-similar nature of the expansion found
as a solution to the original model. As a rule, the profiles of self-similar
solutions tend to be attractors for the `real', more complicated, system, and
the qualitative predictions involving no parameters, of which the
electron-to-ion energy transfer is one, tend to be very sturdy.
Aside from fuelling pellets, composed of hydrogen or deuterium, one paper in
this thesis investigates the physics of high-Z pellets that are designed to
terminate the plasma safely in the event of a `disruption', where much of the
magnetic field energy is channelled into a runaway electron beam with
potentially disastrous consequences if the beam encounters a plasma-facing
component. The paper draws on the work carried out in the paper concerning the
kinetic problem of isotropised electrons in a plasmoid.
This thesis is `cumulative'; the vast majority of the work carried out is
described within a set of Papers, labelled A-E, placed at the back of the text.
There is a preceding `wrapper text' (given in numbered Sections) tasked with
introducing the reader to the topic, guiding the reader through the papers, and
expounding some of their main results. Some amount of material not present in
the papers is also provided in the wrapper text. Naturally, the wrapper text
mainly focusses on the results of the papers which are under my first
authorship. In the course of publishing papers over an extended period of time
the nomenclature is bound to vary. Although it is mostly consistent between the
papers, a few difference do arise, and the section `Common symbols and
subscripts' is provided in the frontmatter to alleviate confusion. Particular
care should be taken with the symbols x and z; both can refer to the
coordinate parallel to the magnetic field line, but in papers where z is used
for this purpose x tends to have another definition. In the wrapper text the
choice of symbols is generally chosen to reflect those in the corresponding
paper.
The Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) has become an important tool for probing the mechanical properties of cells and microparticles by force-indentation experiments. In this thesis optimized AFM approaches for these experiments are developed and applied to three types of living human cells in order to answer biologically relevant questions about their mechanics. These microscopic investigations are then interpreted with respect to nanoscopic and macroscopic biologic parameters, such as the function of cell surface receptors or the size of human heart ventricles. This thesis comprises two physical/technical chapters and three medical/biological chapters. The physical/technical chapters discuss the measurement process itself, aiming for its improvement with respect to a proper data analysis and contact model (for spherical cells). The medical/biological chapters investigate the elasticity of cells by the use of optimized AFM approaches, with respect to the used data analysis.
The thesis describes experimental results based on optical diagnostics of low- pressure discharges. The models, which are necessary for the interpretation of the experimental data, are developed and simulations are done. The contents can be categorized into the following topics: 1) the time-resolved tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy of excited states of argon in pulsed magnetron discharge and modeling the plasma afterglow; 2) optical emission- and laser absorption spectroscopy of excited states of argon in radio-frequency (rf) discharge and calculation of the escape factor for self-absorption; 3) fast video recording of the oscillatory motion of a dust particle in rf discharge and analysis of the data.
A central point of this thesis is the investigation of surface structure and surface forces, which are created by single layers of linear polyelectrolytes (PE). In detail, the properties of cationic poly(allylamine)hydrochloride (PAH) and poly-l-lysine (PLL) and anionic sodium poly(styrene sulfonate) (PSS) are determined, which have been physisorbed onto oppositely charged silica surfaces in presence of a predefined salt concentration IAds. For these investigations, a new averaging method for colloidal probe (CP) force profiles is developed, which leads to an ultimate force resolution of 1 pN after the data processing, (signal to noise ratio of > 1000). Furthermore, a new kind of tapping mode imaging is presented (so called colloidal probe tapping mode, CPTM), which uses a CP instead of a sharp tip and hence which allows to resolve lateral inhomogeneously distributed surface forces. The basics to understand such-like obtained tapping mode images are developed. For adsorption from salt-free solution (IAds = 0) the dominance of an electrostatic double layer repulsion is observed, which is commonly attributed to the adsorption of the PE chains into a rather flat and compact layer and which is in full agreement with theoretical predictions and enormous experimental data available in literature. However, even a small addition of salt to the deposition solution (i.e. IAds > 1 mM NaCl) introduces a new contribution to the surface force, which is attributed to PE chains that are non-flatly physisorbed. Using scaling considerations, it is shown for all investigated PE that this non-flat conformation can be described by brush-like chain adsorption (cf. Section 3.3.5); other conformations like mushroom or pancake are excluded (cf. Section 5.3). Interestingly, these non-flatly physisorbed chains combine properties of neutral and PE brushes: (i) The force is very well described by the theory of Alexander and de Gennes (AdG, cf. Section 5.4). By fitting the AdG force law to the data, it is possible to determine the (brush) thickness L of the PE layer and the average distance s between brush-like physisorbed chains. Although the chains are charged the electrostatic contribution to the surface forces is too small to be noticeable (cf. Section 5.4.2). (ii) The thickness L of this PE layer is much larger compared to the compact layer (observed for salt-free adsorption) and is also subject to a pronounced swelling and shrinking if the bulk salt concentration I is decreased or increased, respectively. Surprisingly, all measurements indicate that L follows a scaling law known for salted end-grafted PE brushes, i.e. L ~ N (I s^2)^(-1/3) (with N denoting the degree of polymerization). Furthermore, the osmotic brush phase is never observed in the experiments, but chain stretching up to 1 / 3 of the contour length is regularly achieved. CPTM imaging applied to PSS shows that the brush-like physisorbed chains are not homogenously distributed over the surface, but form brush domains which coexist with flatly physisorbed chains (cf. sections 5.5 and 5.6). This clearly shows that PSS generally physisorbs in two distinct phases, which differ in conformation (flat vs. brush) and the surface force caused (electrostatic vs. steric repulsion). The force profile of the two phase system is in good approximation simply the superposition of a steric and an electrostatic repulsion, whereby their respective contribution to the composed force profile is given by their area fraction. The quantitative analysis reveals that L and s of the brush phase are independent on IAds. This is remarkable, as a change in IAds is known to induce a continuous transition between a stretched (low IAds) and coiled chain conformation (high IAds) in the deposition solution (cf. [Fleer1993, Yashiro2002]). Hence, one can conclude that the conformation in solution does not necessarily correspond to the conformation after adsorption. It is also shown that the area fraction A of the brush domains strongly depends on N and IAds. For example, for constant N the scaling relation A ~ sqrt(IAds) is determined, which is very similar to the common observation that the surface coverage %Gamma of adsorbed PE layers increases also with %Gamma ~ sqrt(IAds) [Schmitt1996, Cosgrove1986, Ahrens2001, Yim2000, Gopinadhan2007, Cornelson2010]. This suggest that brush-like physisorbed PE chains are responsible for the increase in %Gamma. In fact, Section 5.6 shows that the mass of the brush phase is approx. 0.5 mg/m² which is comparable to the increase in %Gamma reported in literature for IAds = 1 M NaCl [Cosgrove1986, Schmitt1996, Ahrens2001]. As a change in IAds does not affect L and s, but solely the brush area fraction A, it is argued in Section 5.6 that an increase in IAds can be understood as a phase transition from the (disordered) flat phase towards the (ordered and extended) brush phase. Here, further theoretical considerations would be desirable.
A fluorescent lamp driven with an 'instant start electronic control gear' starts in a glow mode. In the glow mode, which lasts typically for tens of milliseconds, the cathode fall exceeds hundreds of volts. This causes high energy ion bombardment of the electrode which heats the electrode, and induces a transition from glow to arc mode. In the arc mode the electrode emits thermionically and the cathode fall drops to the 12 – 15 V range. Unfortunately, the high energy ion bombardment during the glow mode leads also to intense sputtering of electrode material, including tungsten as well as emitter. Thus, instant started fluorescent lamps often suffer from early failures due to coil fracture. Therefore, the investigation of tungsten erosion during instant start is necessary and was the main goal of this work.
The density of neutral atomic tungsten is determined by laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) and optical emission spectroscopy measurements (OES). Investigations are performed on a low-pressure argon dc discharge and on commercial fluorescent lamps. To include the entire temperature profile along the electrode the diffuse and spot operation modes of the dc lamp are studied experimentally and theoretically. The measured dependencies of the cathode temperature along the coil on the discharge and heating parameters are compared with the calculated results. For the first time the tungsten erosion during instant start of commercial fluorescent lamps was experimentally investigated in this work. The erosion process could be related to sputtering. A reconstruction of the temporal evolution of the absolute tungsten population density of the ground state during the glow mode was presented. The sputtered tungsten density increases immediately with the ignition, reaches a maximum where the discharge contracts at the end of the glow mode, and decreases some milliseconds before the glow-to-arc transition takes place. The maximum tungsten density was observed within a region of a few hundred micrometers only located at the discharge attachment point. The main result achieved in this work is that during the whole glow mode tungsten is sputtered. Therefore, the lifetime of instant started fluorescent lamps can be enhanced by reducing the duration of the glow mode. Additionally, the need for the application of different types of diagnostics for the observation of lamp ignition was shown due to different results of LIF, AAS and OES: The observation of excited tungsten atoms by OES shows the maximum emission signal at the glow-to-arc transition whereas by LIF and AAS measurements of tungsten atoms in the ground state the maximum density is found during the whole glow mode. This can be explained by the fact that the intensity of the spontaneous emitted light is related not only to the density but also to the degree of excitation.
In this work, various aspects of fundamental physics and chemistry of molecular gas discharges are presented with emphasis on the interaction between species, activated by low-pressure plasmas, and surfaces. As already known, synergistic effects of multiple plasma-generated species are responsible for surface modification. However, due to the large number of internal parameters of a discharge and the complex plasma processes the identification of correlations between plasma characteristics and their effects on surfaces are complicated. Therefore, the aim of this thesis is to improve the understanding of several phenomena associated with plasma–surface interactions by measuring or calculating fundamental kinetic, transport or spectroscopic data needed to interpret measurements and hereby, to support some future applications of plasmas.
The current work is focused on the study of two surface modification plasma processes, (i) the active screen plasma nitriding (ASPN) and nitrocarburizing (ASPNC) for the hardening of ferrous surfaces and (ii) the microwave plasma assisted chemical vapor deposition (MW-PACVD) for the synthesis of single crystal and doped diamond. Conventional and active screen plasma nitriding processes have been investigated in a cylindrical, industrial scale ASPN reactor with a volume of about 1 m3, using low-pressure pulsed dc H2-N2 plasmas with admixtures of CH4 or CO2. The experiments were carried out (i) with the plasma at an internal model probe, (ii) with the plasma at the active screen (floated model probe) and (iii) with the plasma at the active screen and an additional plasma at the biased model probe. For deeper insights in ASPN and ASPNC processes, a laboratory scale plasma nitriding monitoring reactor, PLANIMOR, has been constructed. The main feature of this reactor is the linear configuration of the electrode setup combined with a tubular glass vessel, overcoming the experimental disadvantages of cylindrical laboratory scale ASPN reactors. With the help of infrared laser absorption spectroscopy (IRLAS) the rotational temperature of the stable molecules in the gas phase and the concentrations of the precursor, CH4, and the reaction products (NH3, HCN, C2H2, C2H4, CO, CH3) could be determined in both reactors, depending on the plasma power, the gas mixture, the plasma at the model probe and the admixture of CH4. Furthermore, the admixture of CO2 as the carbon containing precursor has been studied in the ASPN reactor leading to an additional reaction product H2O. The concentration of the molecular species has been found being in a range of 1012 to 1016 molecules cm-3. Also optical emission spectroscopy (OES) has been applied during the studies for analyzing the emission of the plasmas in the nitriding and nitrocarburizing processes. A similar behavior of the plasma chemistry in PLANIMOR comparing to that in the ASPN reactor has been found. Beside the plasma chemical investigations, both reactors have been used for the treatment of C15 steel samples. These samples have been analyzed with the help of GDOES resulting in the elements profile of the treated surfaces. It has been found that samples treated in PLANIMOR reach comparable nitriding results as samples treated in the ASPN reactor. Another focus of interest during the investigations about plasma nitrocarburizing has been the application of a carbon containing screen electrode as carbon source. For this purpose the carbon containing precursor and the steel screen have been substituted by a meshed carbon electrode, acting as the active screen. This change of the setup leads to a decrease of the NH3 production by a factor of 2.5 and an increase of the concentrations of HCN by a factor of 30 and of C2H2 by a factor of 70. The investigations of MW-PACVD processes used for diamond layer deposition have been carried out in a jacketed stainless steel reactor (JR), dedicated to the deposition of single crystalline diamond under high pressure and plasma power conditions. Using H2-plasmas with admixtures of CH4 and B2H6, the experiments were carried out in order to analyze the dependence of the plasma chemistry on several parameters, such as plasma power, pressure and gas mixture, in a wide pressure (p = 25…270 mbar) and power range (P = 0.6…4 kW). Using IRLAS the concentrations of six molecular species (B2H6, CH4, C2H2, C2H4, C2H6, CH3) have been monitored. With the help of OES the concentration of atomic boron could be determined. The concentrations of the detected molecular and atomic species were found to be in a range of 1010 to 1017 cm-3. With the help of the line-ratio-method the rotational temperature of the stable molecules has been determined. The temperature increased with pressure and power from 340 to 425 K. Using the Doppler broadening of the absorption line of CH3 at ν = 612,413 cm-1, the gas temperature has found to be Tg = (2000 ± 200) K under lower pressure and power conditions. For the H2-CH4 gas mixture, the experimental obtained molecular densities have been compared to those of a 1D-radial thermochemical model. The calculated radial densities have been integrated axially. For the same range the chemical processes in JR have been compared with those in a bell-jar (BJ) reactor. The hydrocarbon chemistry in JR has found to be similar to that in a BJ reactor.
The term atomic cluster relates to compounds of at least two or three atoms. Thereby the physical properties are size dependent and the property transitions between single atoms and bulk material are not always smooth. Ion traps allow it to observe internal cluster properties independent from the influence of external forces. In this work the electron induced decay of singly negatively charged atomic clusters was observed. The dissociation cross section of the clusters is dominated by detachment of the only weakly bound outer electrons. For simple atoms at low electron energies a simple scaling law can be obtained that includes only the binding energies of the valence electrons. Nevertheless for larger sizes theoretical calculations predict so called "giant resonances" as dominant decay process in metal clusters. Due to mass limitations in storage rings exist so far only cross section measurements for simple anions and small negative molecules. In this work the electron detachment cross sections of small negatively charged carbon (Cn- n=2-12), aluminium (Aln- n=2-7) and silver clusters (Agn- n=1-11) were measured in an electrostatic ion beam trap. The classical scaling law, including only the binding energies of the valence electrons, turned out to be not sufficient, especially for larger clusters. In order to improve the correlation between measured and predicted values it was proposed to involve the influence of the cluster volume and the specific polarisability induced by long range coulomb interaction. For silver clusters the best agreement was obtained using a combination of the projected area reduced by the polarisability. The existence of "giant resonances" could not be confirmed. According to theory for clusters with a broad internal energy distribution, a power-law decay close to 1/time is expected. For some clusters the lifetime behaviour would be strongly quenched by photon emission. The thermionic evaporative decay of anionic aluminium and silver clusters in a size range from one to ten constituents was tested but a correlation could be only found incidentally for a few cluster sizes.
Es wurde ein Versuchsaufbau für die Behandlung von Titanproben mittels der Plasma-Immersions-Ionen-Implantation konzipiert, konstruiert und aufgebaut. Im Unterschied zu üblichen PIII-Anlagen wurde hier eine kapazitiv gekoppelte RF-Entladung als Hintergrundentladung mit zwei koplanaren Elektroden direkt über den zu behandelnden Titanproben benutzt. Auf diese Weise war es möglich unter Verwendung von Kupfer für die Elektroden und den Probenhalter, die Titanproben mit Kupfer zu dotieren und parallel, durch die Wahl geeigneter Prozessgase, zu oxidieren. Zusätzlich waren neben Prozessgaskontrollern auch Flüssigkeitskontroller vorhanden, so dass mit diesem Versuchsaufbau Gase, verdampfte Flüssigkeiten und erodierte Metalle in verschiedensten Kombinationen gleichzeitig als Prozessgas für die PIII zur Verfügung gestellt werden konnte. Wie bei PIII-Prozessen erforderlich, waren die Hochspannungshöhe und -dauer einstellbar. Der Strom wurde so gemessen, dass er die Ionendosis wider gibt und für die Temperaturmessung der Substratoberfläche wurde ein in-situ Pyrometer verwendet. Die relevanten elektrischen Parameter wurden mittels eines Oszilloskops bestimmt. Es stellte sich heraus, dass ein Gesamtionenstrom von bis zu 48mA implantiert werden konnte. Dies entspricht bis zu 3.5 x 1015 Ionen cm-2 s-1 und dementsprechend einem Energiestrom von bis zu 5 J cm-2 s-1. Die daraus resultierenden Temperaturen der Substratoberfläche betrugen bis zu 600 °C. Diese Parameter bewegen sich durchaus im Parameterfeld herkömmlicher Anlagen. Der erste inhaltliche Arbeitsgegenstand dieser Arbeit bestand darin, die Oberfläche der Titanproben unter Verwendung von Sauerstoff als Prozessgas mit einem ausreichend dicken und idealerweise kristallinen Titandioxid zu modifizieren. Auf diese Weise wurde die undefinierte natürliche Oxidschicht durch ein definiertes Oxid ausgetauscht. Röntgen-Diffraktometrie Messungen der modifizierten Proben ergaben neben alpha-Titan auch Rutil als primäre Kristallstruktur in der Oberfläche. Durch Variation der Prozessparameter, speziell des Duty-Cycle und damit des Ionenstroms bzw. der Temperatur der Titanproben, konnte die Konzentration an Rutil direkt gesteuert werden. Der zweite inhaltliche Arbeitsgegenstand bestand in der Modifikation des Prozesses und des Versuchsaufbaus zur Dotierung des Titans mit einem antimikrobiell wirksamen Metall, wobei Kupfer aufgrund seiner biologischen Eigenschaften favorisiert wurde. Um die positiven physikochemischen Eigenschaften der Titandioxidoberfläche bestmöglich zu nutzen, wurde parallel zur Dotierung mit Kupfer eine definierte Titandioxid-Schicht erzeugt. Als Prozessgas wurden dafür sauerstoffhaltige Gase, speziell Sauerstoff und Wasserdampf verwendet. Es zeigte sich, dass mit Sauerstoff aufgrund des hohen atomaren O Anteils CuO und TiO2 erzeugt, während mit Wasserdampf, aufgrund der reduzierenden Wirkung des Wasserstoffs, bis zu 30% metallisches Kupfer in die TiO2 Matrix eingebracht werden konnte. Zusätzlich konnte ein Übergang von alpha-Titan für kleine Ionendosen zu Rutil für Dosen oberhalb von 4 x 1018 Ionen cm-2 und 450 °C festgestellt werden. Weiterhin zeigten die Diffraktogramme Ti3O als Übergangsmodifikation, jedoch keine Kupfer- oder Kupferoxidkristalle. Durch geeignete Prozessparameterwahl ist es daher selbst bei geringen Implantationsspannungen von 10 kV möglich, einen bis zu 200nm dicken Verbund aus kristallinem TiO2 (Rutil) angereichert mit metallischem Kupfer zu erzeugen. Ein zusätzlicher Arbeitsgegenstand bestand in exemplarischen Zelltests mit Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) und MG-63 Zellen als Vertreter für problematische Krankenhauskeime bzw. als Modellorganismus für Knochenzellen. Parallel zu diesen Versuchen wurde das Kupfer-Release der mit Kupfer dotierten Titanoberfläche bestimmt. Mit höheren Ionendosen während der Ionenimplantation konnten die Proben dahingehend modifiziert werden, dass eine höhere Kupferkonzentration aus dem Verbund ausgelöst wurde. Dieser Verlauf spiegelte sich auch in den Zelltests wieder. Während die Vitalität der MG-63 Zellen mit steigender Dosis abnahm, stieg die antibakterielle Wirkung an. So konnten über 95% der Bakterien getötet werden, wobei die Zellvitalität mit 80% im Vergleich zur Zelle auf dem Deckgläschen immer noch sehr hoch war. Weiterhin wurde eine brauchbare numerische Simulation erstellt, die ein besseres Verständnis der physikalischen Prozesse auf und unter der Oberfläche der zu modifizierenden Proben ermöglichte. Zusätzlich kann, basierend auf dieser Simulation, eine Prozessabstimmung geschehen. In die Simulation gingen die mit der Software TRIM simulierten Tiefenprofile, Sputterraten der einzelnen Oberflächenelemente, Elementanteile der Oberfläche sowie der einfliegenden Ionen und deren Energie mit ein. Dabei zeigte sich, dass die experimentell erhaltenen Tiefenprofile mit diesem Modell bis zu einem gewissen Genauigkeitsgrad qualitativ und quantitativ erklärt werden können.
In this work we will analyse the capabilities of several numerical techniques for the description of different physical systems. Thereby, the considered systems range from quantum over semiclassical to classical and from few- to many-particle systems. For each case we address an interesting, partly unsolved question. Despite the different topics we address in the individual chapters, the problems under study are somehow related because we focus on the time evolution of the system. In chapter 1 we investigate the behaviour of a single quantum particle in the presence of an external disordered background (static potentials). Starting from the quantum percolation problem, we address the fundamental question of a disorder induced (Anderson-) transition from extended to localised single-particle eigenstates. Distinguishing isolating from conducting states by applying a local distribution approach for the local density of states (LDOS), we detect the quantum percolation threshold in two- and three-dimensions. Extending the quantum percolation model to a quantum random resistor model, we comment on the possible relevance of our results to the influence of disorder on the conductivity in graphene sheets. Furthermore, we confirm the localisation properties of the 2D percolation model by calculating the full quantum time evolution of a given initial state. For the calculation of the LDOS as well as for the Chebyshev expansion of the time evolution operator, the kernel polynomial method (KPM) is the key numerical technique. In chapter 2 we examine how a single quantum particle is influenced by retarded bosonic fields that are inherent to the system. Within the Holstein model, these bosonic degrees of freedom (phonons) give rise to an infinite dimensional Hilbert space, posing a true many-particle problem. Constituting a minimal model for polaron formation, the Holstein model allows us to study the optical absorption and activated transport in polaronic systems. Using a two-dimensional variant of the KPM, we calculate for the first time quasi-exactly the optical absorption and dc-conductivity as a function of temperature. Concerning the numerical technique, the close relation to the time evolution in the other chapters get clear if we identify temperature with an imaginary time. In chapter 3 we come back to the time evolution of a quantum particle in an external, static potential and investigate the capability of semiclassical approximations to it. Considering various one-dimensional geometries, we address basic quantum effects as tunneling, interference and anharmonicity. The question is, to which extend and at which numerical costs, several semiclassical methods can reproduce the exact result for the quantum dynamics, calculated by Chebyshev expansion. To this end we consider the linearised semiclassical propagator method, the Wigner-Moyal approach and the recently proposed quantum tomography. A conceptually very interesting aspect of the compared semiclassical methods is their relation to different representations of quantum mechanics (wave function/density matrix, Wigner function, quantum tomogram). Finally, in chapter 4 we calculate the dynamics of a classical many-particle system under the influence of external fields. Considering a low-temperature rf-plasma, we investigate the interplay of the plasma dynamics and the motion of dust particles, immersed into the plasma for diagnostic reasons. In addition to the huge number of involved particles, the numerical description of this systems faces the challenge of a large range of involved time and length scales. Exploiting the mass differences of plasma constituents and dust particles allows for separating the PIC description of the plasma from the MD simulation of the dust particles in the effective surrounding plasma.
Beams of ions and electrons are a source of free energy which can be transferred to waves via an instability. Beams exist in almost all plasma environments, but their instabilities are particularly important for the dynamics of space plasmas. In the absence of collisions, the instability drives waves to large amplitudes and forms nonlinear structures such as solitary waves. The electric fields in these waves can scatter particles in the background plasma, or disrupt currents. Both of these effects are important for the overall dynamics of the plasma. In this thesis, both electron and ion beam plasma instabilities have been investigated in the linear plasma device VINETA and using a Particle-in-Cell simulation. The electron beam instability has been demonstrated by previous authors to be a useful diagnostic for the plasma density. The spatial resolution of previous results was confirmed at a few millimetres, and a temporal resolution of 1ms was shown for the first time. An ion beam was generated with a double plasma discharge. Compared to space, this environment and indeed most laboratory plasmas have considerably higher collisionality and a limited spatial extent which introduces gradients in the plasma. Gradients perpendicular to the beam propagation direction are linked to a decrease of both the wavelength and amplitude of the instability. It was observed in both experiment and simulation that gradients in sheaths at the boundaries of the plasma not only affect the time averaged plasma parameters, but also excite instabilities. Fluctuations within the sheath spread the beam in velocity space, effectively increasing its temperature. Warmer beams require a higher drift velocity to excite an instability. This was also confirmed by experimental and numerical results. Collisions are shown to be the dominant damping force for the electron beam instability. For ions, collisions play an important role in the simulation, but appear to be overshadowed by Landau damping from impurities in the experiment. When boundary conditions are removed from the simulation, wave amplitudes increase and nonlinear effects become important. Saturation by particle trapping and coalescence of phase space holes is observed, which could eventually lead to the solitary waves as they are observed in space plasmas.
Research into nuclear physics has enjoyed a long and rich history since the earliest experiments began investigating atomic constituents. The discovery of the atomic nucleus in the early 20th century started a complex field of research that has undergone many transformations with the advancements of modern technology. Today, atomic nuclei are not only studied to advance our understanding of the strong force but also to gain more information on the synthesis of elements in the universe, to exploit nuclear decay to investigate the weak interaction, and to search for physics beyond the standard model.
In this work, we will study the strong force in atomic nuclei, i.e. the way nucleons (protons and neutrons) arrange themselves in a many-body system governed by the repulsive Coulomb interaction and the attractive strong interaction. In particular, we will focus on nuclear structure near nuclei with a "magic number" of Z protons and N neutrons, so-called doubly-magic nuclei, exhibiting a particularly stable configuration with respect to neighboring nuclei.
Within the nuclear shell model, similar to the atomic shells, the magic numbers indicate shell closures accompanied by energy gaps. Nuclei at double-shell closures and their direct vicinity provide an important playground to benchmark nuclear theories and models that aim to predict the intricate interplay of the nucleons that lead to enhanced nuclear binding energies, significant changes in charge radii and transition strengths, etc.
Of particular interest are nuclear isomers, long-lived excited states, in which the nucleon configuration with respect to its ground state is altered, resulting in a modification of their properties despite having the same number of protons and neutrons.
The main part of this work consists of three publications, which report on nuclear structure investigations through mass measurements and laser spectroscopy near the doubly magic nuclei nickel-78, tin-100, and lead-208.
The nuclides investigated in this work include neutron-deficient indium isotopes, neutron-rich zinc isotopes, and neutron-rich mercury isotopes.
Infrared laser absorption spectroscopy (IRLAS) employing both tuneable diode and quantum cascade lasers (TDLs, QCLs) has been applied with both high sensitivity and high time resolution to plasma diagnostics and trace gas measurements.
TDLAS combined with a conventional White type multiple pass cell was used to detect up to 13 constituent molecular species in low pressure Ar/H2/N2/O2 and Ar/CH4/N2/O2 microwave discharges, among them the main products such as H2O, NH3, NO and CO, HCN respectively. The hydroxyl radical has been measured in the mid infrared (MIR) spectral range in-situ in both plasmas yielding number densities of between 1011 ... 1012 cm-3. Strong indications of surface dominated formation of either NH3 or N2O and NO were found in the H2-N2-O2 system. In methane containing plasmas a transition between deposition and etching conditions and generally an incomplete oxidation of the precursor were observed.
The application of QCLs for IRLAS under low pressure conditions employing the most common tuning approaches has been investigated in detail. A new method of analysing absorption features quantitatively when the rapid passage effect is present is proposed. If power saturation is negligible, integrating the undisturbed half of the line profile yields accurate number densities without calibrating the system. By means of a time resolved analysis of individual chirped QCL pulses the main reasons for increased effective laser line widths could be identified. Apart from the well-known frequency down chirp non-linear absorption phenomena and bandwidth limitations of the detection system may significantly degrade the performance and accuracy of inter pulse spectrometers. The minimum analogue bandwidth of the entire system should normally not fall below 250 MHz.
QCLAS using pulsed lasers has been used for highly time resolved measurements in reactive plasmas for the first time enabling a time resolution down to about 100 ns to be achieved. A temperature increase of typically less than 50 K has been established for pulsed DC discharges containing Ar/N2 and traces of NO. The main NO production and depletion reactions have been identified from a comparison of model calculations and time resolved measurements in plasma pulses of up to 100 ms. Considerable NO struction is observed after 5 ... 10 ms due to the impact of N atoms.
Finally, thermoelectrically cooled pulsed and continuous wave (cw) QCLs have been employed for high finesse cavity absorption spectroscopy in the MIR. Cavity ring down spectroscopy (CRDS) has been performed with pulsed QCLs and was found to be limited by the intrinsic frequency chirp of the laser suppressing an efficient intensity build-up inside the cavity. Consequently the accuracy and advantage of an absolute internal absorption calibration is not achievable. A room temperature cw QCL was used in a complementary cavity enhanced absorption spectroscopy (CEAS) configuration which was equipped with different cavities of up to ~ 1.3 m length. This spectrometer yielded path lengths of up to 4 km and a noise equivalent absorption down to 4 x 10-8 cm-1Hz-1/2. The corresponding molecular concentration detection limit (e.g. for CH4, N2O and C2H2 at 1303 cm-1/7.66 μm) was generally below 1 x 1010 cm-3 for 1 s integration times and one order of magnitude less for 30 s integration times. The main limiting factor for achieving even higher sensitivity is the residual mode noise of the cavity. Employing a ~ 0.5 m long cavity the achieved sensitivity was good enough for the selective measurement of trace atmospheric constituents at 2.2 mbar.
(A paperback version is published by Logos under ISBN 978-3-8325-2345-9.)
The electron and negative ion densities in an asymmetric capacitively coupled low-pressure RF plasma in oxygen were systematically studied and compared to the electropositive argon RF plasma during continuous and pulsed power input. This work presents the careful design and realization of a non-invasive 160.28 GHz Gaussian beam microwave interferometry (MWI) as an innovative diagnostic tool. MWI directly provides the line integrated electron density without any model assumption. The high microwave frequency enables one to accurately describe the microwave free space propagation by means of Gaussian beam theory. The microwave interferometer is simultaneously coupled with laser photodetachment to experimentally determine the negative ion density in the CCRF oxygen discharge. This is the first time that both diagnostics were combined in low-pressure capacitively coupled RF oxygen plasmas. This thesis first presents comprehensive measurements of the steady state line integrated electron density in dependence on RF power and pressure for an argon and oxygen plasma. For both gases the electron density increases with RF power. However, the line integrated electron density in oxygen is about a factor 3 to 10 smaller than in argon. The reduced electron density is accompanied by a high number of negative ions, which exceeded the electron density and resulted in a high electronegative mode. With increasing RF power, the plasma switches into a low electronegative mode. Consequently, the discharge operates in two different modes, which are distinguished by their degree of electronegativity. The transition between the high and low electronegative modes is step-like and it was concluded that one can here directly see the discharge switches from the &alpha-mode to the &gamma-mode. The &gamma-mode (low electronegative mode, high RF power) is characterized by a strong increase of the electron density and a simultaneous decrease of the negative ion density. The increase may be connected to the production of secondary electrons by collision detachment of negative ions within the RF sheath (“pseudo-secondary electron”), in addition to the classical &gamma process due to positive ion bombardment of the powered electrode. In comparison to the &gamma-mode the &alpha-mode (high electronegative mode, low RF power) reveals more negative ions than electrons. Furthermore, a simple 0d attachment-detachment model was applied to calculate the effective rate coefficients for dissociative electron attachment and collisional detachment from the experimentally determined values of steady state electron and negative ion density, as well as the detachment decay time constant. Hence, the attachment rate coefficient of the molecular ground and the excited metastable state in dependence on RF power were determined. Moreover, the density of metastable molecular oxygen was estimated to 10% of the molecular ground state oxygen. The influence of each electronegative mode to the entire temporal behavior of the oxygen discharge was intensively investigated by pulsing the discharge. Here it was shown that for the low electronegative mode the afterglow behavior is similar to that of an electropositive argon plasma. In the high electronegative mode an electron density peak in the early afterglow was observed. It was concluded that the electron production originates from the collisional detachment of negative ions. The negative ion loss and the electron production in the early afterglow were modeled numerically with a 0d rate equation system. The model accurately describes the afterglow behavior of both electronegative modes and the additional electron density peak in the early of the high electronegative mode. For the high electronegative mode the molecular oxygen plays an important role as a detachment partner for the production of electrons in the early afterglow. Furthermore, the presence of the negative ions causes fluctuations of plasma parameters. 2d spatial and temporal fluctuations of the ion saturation current are measured during the instability. The temporal and phase resolved optical emission spectroscopy shows a strong change in emission pattern during the instability, which becomes more obvious for one RF cycle at characteristic instability phases. Here, the excitation patterns reveal significant changes in the electron heating mechanisms.
Energetic ions are made to collide with atmospheric molecules. Positively charged ions of argon (Ar^+), helium (He^+), hydrogen (H_2^+ ), and protons (H^+) with energies of 50 keV to 350 keV are used as the bombarding ion. The ion beam of desired energy is produced using a linear ion accelerator at the University of Greifswald. The mass and energy distribution of sputtered particles were analysed using an Electrostatic Quadrupole SIMS (EQS) analyser. The target gases used are oxygen (O_2), sulfur hexafluoride (SF_6), and nitrogen (N_2). The ionized and fragmented particles due to collisions have been investigated. We have discovered a new process for negative ion formation in energetic ion collision with O_2 and SF_6 molecules. The process is a two body reaction between the projectile and the molecule without the need for a third particle (such as an external electron). It requires a direct charge transfer from the projectile to the molecule leaving it intact as O_2^- or SF_6^- . The process is experimentally confirmed by using a proton as projectile which does not have an electron to transfer. In comparison with positive ion fractions (O_2^+ , SF_5^+ ), the negative ions fraction is smaller by 2 orders of magnitude. This shows that the two body charge exchange process is weak due to the larger energy transfer required compared to the positive ion forming mechanisms. The two body charge exchange mechanism is not observed for ion collisions with N_2 molecule. No stable negative ion exist for N_2 molecule. The collision cross section for the ion formation during energetic ion – O_2 collision has been determined within the investigated impact energy. For SF_6 molecule the partial ion fraction of the secondary ions are determined for different projectiles involved. This kind of investigation is of great importance mainly in atmospheric physics. Energetic ions are constantly emitted from mass of the energy sources in the universe (e.g. sun). They interact with planetary objects or atmosphere on their way. A deep knowledge about the interaction processes is necessary to understand the ionospheric physics and space exploration. As second part of my thesis, a GaAs(100) surface is bombarded with 150 keV Ar^+ ion beam. From etching the surface to thin film coating, ion bombardment on solid surface found great role in the fabrication process of modern electronic and optical devices. In order to increase the knowledge on sputtering materials and because of profound importance in modern electronics, we choose GaAs(100) as our target. Among the sputtered atoms and ions, small sized cluster ions having more than 6 atoms have been identified. GaAs is a heteroatomic semiconductor containing gallium and arsenic in equal ratio. A preferential phenomenon of ’abundant sputtering’ of gallium compared to little arsenic (GaAs) has been investigated from their mass intensity. The experimental ion counts are compared with theoretically predicted relative abundance. This phenomenon of preferential sputtering is known for atomic species of sputtered GaAs but not for the sputtered cluster ions. The main reasons for this abundant sputtering of one element is attributed to the difference in ion formation energies and surface compositional change taking place during the sputtering process. Another notable characteristics is the preference in charge state among the sputtered ions. For instance, among sputtered atomic ions the ion counts of Ga^+ is 3 orders larger than As^+ ion and As^- is 2 orders larger than Ga^- ion. To get a clue for this behavior, we have investigated the energy distribution of both negatively and positively charged clusters. Different ion formation mechanisms were discussed. The energy distribution of atomic ion is partially explained by using a modified theory given by M. W. Thompson.
Multiply negatively charged aluminium clusters and fullerenes were generated in a Penning trap using the "electron-bath" technique. Aluminium monoanions were generated using a laser vaporisation source. After this, two-, three- and four-times negatively charged aluminium clusters were generated for the first time. This research marks the first observation of tetra-anionic metal clusters in the gas phase. Additionally, doubly-negatively charged fullerenes were generated. The smallest fullerene dianion observed contained 70 atoms.
In this doctoral thesis, algorithms are presented that are designed for the investigation in the mesopause region between the upper Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere (MLT). The photochemical models are proposed and applied to represent the oxygen airglow and the oxygen photochemistry in the MLT. Atomic oxygen, O, in the ground state, O(3P), is of special interest because it is a reactive trace gas actively contributing to the Earth’s airglow. The retrievals of O(3P) concentrations, [O(3P)], are based on the nightglow time series of the green line emission measured remotely as in the first part of this thesis and the individual profiles of multiple nightglow emissions of O and molecular oxygen (O2) measured in situ as in the second part of this thesis. To process the complete spectral time series measured by using the satellite-borne instrument SCIAMACHY (SCanning Imaging Absorption spectroMeter for Atmospheric CHartographY), an intricate set of algorithms is developed and applied with the regularized total least squares minimization approach to estimate a set of the optimal regularization parameters and to retrieve a corresponding set of vertical Volume Emission Rate (VER) profiles. Furthermore, these algorithms take emissions of another origin and the Earth's shape into account. Considering not identified states of O2, the established photochemical models are adjusted resulting in two model modifications. Both model modifications are employed to retrieve the [O(3P)] time series on the basis of the VER time series in the MLT. The model input parameters vary in the atmosphere that motivated to propose these two model modifications and to employ available sources of the input parameters. One semi-empirical model, one general circulation model and the satellite-borne instrument SABER (Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission Radiometry) are employed as sources of the reference [O(3P)] and input parameters time series. The SABER instrument employed as a source of the input parameters is preferred according to the comparison of the retrieved and reference [O(3P)] time series. Studying the impact of the 11-year solar cycle on O(3P) in the MLT, an algorithm is developed and applied with the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm to estimate the optimal fit parameters step-wise. The results of the O(3P) sensitivity analysis obtained with respect to the solar activity forcing at the 11 year and 27 day time scales and the lunar gravitational forcing agree with the reference model simulations. The hypothesis regarding vertical shifts between different of Meinel bands at least partly caused by the hydroxyl radical (OH*) quenching with O(3P) is confirmed experimentally. Based on the conclusion drawn in the first part of this thesis that the data sets’ self-consistency is high as for the averaged SABER and SCIAMACHY measurements, a comprehensive set of available data with a higher level of the data sets’ self-consistency is employed in the second part of this thesis. Multiple airglow emissions measured in situ during four campaigns are employed to propose the Multiple Airglow Chemistry (MAC) model. Processed emissions are the Herzberg I, Chamberlain, Atmospheric and Infrared Atmospheric band emissions of O2 and the green line emission of O. Considering all widely known and additionally complemented reactions, the MAC model is proposed to represent the oxygen airglow and the oxygen photochemistry in the MLT. The presented MAC model is based on the hypothesis of Slanger et al. (2004) stating that higher excited states of O2 are coupled with each other through vibronic de-excitation caused by collisions among molecules of this group of O2 states in the MLT. This hypothesis is modified excluding the singlet Herzberg state of O2 from the group of O2 states considered by Slanger et al. (2004). The MAC calculations are carried out sequentially starting with higher excited O2 states to provide the retrieved output concentrations of these O2 states as the input concentrations to the next calculation steps. The final step is only based on concentrations of all species, whereas each of the earlier steps is based on a corresponding VER profile besides of the input concentrations. The oxygen photochemistry in the MLT is represented by all species considered at the final step that makes it possible to adopt the MAC reactions in a general circulation model. Four modifications of the MAC model, i.e. including or excluding the triplet Herzberg states of O2 and including or excluding ozone and odd hydrogen (hydrogen, OH* and hydroperoxy radical), lead to negligible differences in the retrieved [O(3P)] profiles. Based on the MAC calculations verified and validated on the basis of the four rocket campaigns, one of the effective modifications of the MAC model (excluding the triplet Herzberg states of O2, ozone and odd hydrogen) is further reduced to the most effective modification. This implies that for the [O(3P)] retrieval only the O2 Atmospheric band emission, temperature and concentrations of molecular nitrogen (N2) and O2 are sufficient to apply. Calculations carried out by using the most effective modification of the MAC model are verified and validated on the basis of self-consistent in situ measurements obtained simultaneously. The MAC model enables identifying precursors of (1) the three lowest O2 valence states and (2) the second excited O state responsible for (1) the Atmospheric and Infrared Atmospheric band emissions of O2 and (2) the green line emission of O, respectively. Particularly, the singlet Herzberg state of O2 is identified as the major precursor of the second excited O state resulting in the green line emission. In focus of potential further research is an extension of the MAC model with vibrationally excited states of O2 and ionized species.
This thesis describes mass measurements at ISOLTRAP/ISOLDE/CERN in the region of the neutron-rich calcium isotopes. For the less exotic and more abundantly produced isotopes 51Ca and 52Ca the Penning trap based ToF-ICR technique could be used to validate the available mass data and to improve their precision. For the isotopes 53Ca and 54Ca, a Multi-Reflection Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometer (MR-ToF MS) was used to determine the mass of these exotic isotopes for the first time experimentally. This also represents the first time an MR-ToF MS was applied to derive the masses of previously unknown radioactive ions from the high precision time-of-flight data that can be gathered with the device. The mass data was then used to benchmark the strength of the N=32 neutron subshell closure and at the same time to compare to state-of-the-art shell-model calculations.
Furthermore, the capability of the MR-ToF device to deliver isobarically pure beams to a subsequent experiment was developed further and studied in detail. The new technique is based on the in-trap lift, which is normally used to in- and eject ions into and from the device. With this new selective ejection technique after separation of the ion ensemble in the MR-ToF trap, no external components are required.
Additionally, a new stabilization system for voltages supplies, based on a PI-algorithm, was developed and thoroughly tested. The stabilized voltage supply was then used to supply the most sensitive mirror voltage of the MR-ToF MS to significantly increase the short term and long-term mass resolving power of the apparatus.
In the present work, mass determinations of the eleven neutron-deficient nuclides (99-109)Cd, of ten neutron-rich silver nuclides (112-114,121,123)Ag, and seven neutron-rich cadmium nuclides (114,120,122-124,126,128)Cd are reported. Due to the clean production of the neutron-deficient nuclides it was possible to reduce the experimental uncertainties down to 2 keV, whereas the measurements of neutron-rich nuclides were hampered by the presence of contaminations from more stable In and Cs nuclides. In the case of 99Cd and 123Ag the masses were determined for the first time and for the other nuclides the mass uncertainties could be reduced by up to a factor of 50 as in the case of 100Cd. In the case of a potential isomeric mixture as for (115,117,119)Ag and 123Cd, where no assignment to either the ground state or the excited state was possible, the experimental results were adjusted accordingly. Afterwards all results were included in the framework of the atomic-mass evaluation and thus linked and compared with other experimental data. In the case of the neutron-deficient Cd nuclides a conflict between the mass values obtained in the present work and those published by the JYFLTRAP group could be solved by performing an atomic-mass evaluation. These mass measurements are an important step towards an understanding of the physics of the rp process that will enable a more reliable determination of the composition of the produced material at A = 99. It has been shown that the mass of 99Cd strongly affects the A = 99 production in an X-ray burst model, and that uncertainties have been significantly reduced from more than an order of magnitude to about a factor of 3. The dominant source of uncertainty is now the mass of 100In. In principle, other uncertainties will also contribute. These include those of masses of lighter Cd isotopes, where similar rp-process branchpoints occur and which might affect feeding into the 99Cd branchpoint. In addition, nuclear reaction rate uncertainties will also play a role. However, as reaction rates affect branchings in a linear fashion, while mass differences enter exponentially, mass uncertainties will tend to dominate. Also, which reaction rates are important depends largely on nuclear masses. For example, for low Sp(100In) a (p,γ)-(γ,p) equilibrium will be established between 99Cd and 100In and the 100In(p,γ) reaction rate would affect the A = 99 production, while for larger Sp(100In) the 99Cd(p,γ) reaction rate might be more relevant. Therefore, the mass uncertainties should be addressed first. The presented results are relevant for any rp-process scenario with a reaction flow through the 99Cd region. Here, an X-ray burst model has been used to investigate in detail the impact of the present measurements on such an rp process. The νp process in core collapse supernovae might be another possible scenario for an rp process in the 99Cd region. It it is planed to also explore whether in that case mass uncertainties have a similar impact on the final composition. On the neutron-rich side of the valley of stability for the Cd and Ag chains of nuclides, the r process has not yet been reached. Further technical development on suppression of contaminants are required. This includes improvements on the ISOLDE side, e.g., by improving the selectivity of the transfer line or on the ISOLTRAP setup by implementing an electrostatic ion beam trap for a fast and efficient isobaric selection. Nevertheless the obtained results contribute to the knowledge of nuclear structure. The trends in the two-neutron separation-energy S2n and the interaction between the last neutrons and last protons ΔVpn were corrected to more smooth evolutions, as already seen in other regions of the nuclear chart. The strongest corrections have been observed for even-N nuclides, were more new experimental data are available. Thus, new measurements on odd-N nuclides are suggested. This also is underlined by the trends observed in the Garvey-Kelson relations for the neutron-rich Cd nuclides. Furthermore, it has been shown, that the prominent structure of the ΔVpn for an entire chain of nuclides including inflexion points can be reproduced by using simple relations between quantum numbers of the occupied orbits. This approach connects ten values for each nuclide with only one adjusted parameter. This has been investigated for 63 ΔVpn values of even-even nuclides in the vicinity of Z = 50 and 50 ≤ N ≤ 82. The simple model works remarkably well for the elements Cd, Sn, and Te. Small deviation have been observed for the Xe and Pd nuclides which were explained with the limitations of the model to the vicinity of the close shells, where the nuclides have only few valence protons and neutrons.
In this Ph.D. project a method is developed to measure the magnetic field and to derive variations in the total plasma pressure due to (dia-) magnetic effects. For this purpose a plasma diagnostic has been set up at the fusion experiment ASDEX Upgrade to measure spectroscopically polarized light. The light is emitted from fast beam-particles excited by the plasma. Since the fast atoms travel through a magnetic field at high velocity, a strong Lorentz field is seen in the moving frame. This electric field gives rise to the so-called motional Stark-effect (MSE) and it is possible to conclude from the Stark-spectrum on the magnetic field.
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.
Lead-cluster investigations
(2017)
In this thesis, investigations on lead clusters stored in a Penning trap are presented. The measurements are performed at the ClusterTrap setup at the Institute of Physics of the University of Greifswald. A Penning trap with a superconducting magnet (B=12 Tesla) makes up the central part of the experiment. In this trap, singly positively or negatively charged lead clusters (a group of lead atoms) are stored, their amplitudes of motion are cooled, and a specific cluster size is selected. Thus, clusters of only a single size are prepared for experimental investigation. After interactions with electrons and/or photons, the trap content is extracted and analyzed by time-of-flight mass spectrometry.
In the first experiment, the size-selected clusters are excited by a frequency-doubled Nd:YAG laser, which leads to fragmentation processes. The preferred fragmentation pathway, which is observed to be break-off of a seven-atom neutral cluster is unusual for metal clusters, which typically evaporate monomers. Furthermore, the already known magic cluster sizes are observed.
In a subsequent experiment, positively charged lead clusters with 31 atoms are irradiated with laser light and fragmentation processes are time resolved investigated. The assumption that lead clusters fragment by break-off of neutral heptamers is confirmed.
In the following experiment, an electron beam is guided through the Penning trap to ionize pulsed-in argon atoms. While the positive argon ions leave the trap, the secondary electrons are trapped together with the selected lead clusters. This allows the electrons to attach to the singly charged lead clusters, which leads to multiply negatively charged lead clusters. The relative abundance of multiply-charged clusters is measured with respect to the cluster size, from which the appearance sizes of di- and trianions can be calculated. In addition to the attachment of electrons, fragmentation products similar to those of the photoexcitation measurements are observed. Furthermore, the cluster sizes 10 and 12 are observed regardless of the investigated precursor size, together with clusters of the precursor size reduced by 10 and 12. This is a first hint for a fission process of doubly negatively charged lead clusters into two singly charged products. In a following measurement, doubly charged lead clusters are produced and photoexcited. The observed abundance spectra confirm this assumption.
Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wird der erfolgreiche Aufbau einer Diagnostik zur quantitativen Bestimmung von Oberflächenladungsdichten beschrieben. Das Messprinzip bedient sich des elektro-optischen Pockelseffekts eines BSO-Kristalls, der in der Entladungszelle als Dielektrikum eingesetzt ist. Diese Methode arbeitet zeitlich und lateral aufgelöst, was die Untersuchung der Dynamik von Oberflächenladungen auf drei verschiedenen Zeitskalen ermöglicht. Die erste Zeitskala liegt in der Größenordnung von einigen 100 ns. Damit kann erstmals die Deposition von elektrischer Ladung auf einer dielektrischen Oberfläche während eines Entladungsdurchbruchs beobachtet werden. Die Deposition beginnt im Zentrum eines zuvor deponierten Ladungsspots. Die Polarität der neudeponierten Ladung ist der des ursprünglichen Ladungsspots entgegengesetzt. Die Folge ist, dass die absolute Ladungsdichte im Zentrum im Verlauf einiger hundert Nanosekunden kleiner wird als in den Randbereichen. Der Umladungsprozess wird so lange fortgesetzt, bis das elektrische Feld der neu deponierten Ladungen dem äußeren Feld so stark entgegenwirkt, dass die Spannung zur Aufrechterhaltung der Entladung unterschritten wird und die Entladung erlischt. Die zweite untersuchte Zeitskala liegt in der Größenordnung der Periodendauer der externen Spannung. Im Nulldurchgang der Spannung liegen zeitlich stationäre Ladungsdichteverteilungen auf dem Dielektrikum vor. Die Geometrie eines mittleren Ladungsspots wird in Abhängigkeit der anliegenden Spannungen und des Gasdrucks untersucht. Einerseits ist der Spotradius abhängig von den Ionisationsprozessen im Volumen, weil die Dichte der Raumladungen die Stärke des Elektronenfokus in das Innere der Entladung steuert. Andererseits wird die Spotbildung durch eine laterale Drift von Ladungsträgern kurz vor der Oberfläche aufgrund des elektrischen Feldes deponierter Ladungsträger beeinflusst. Die dritte untersuchte Zeitskala liegt in einer Größenordnung von Sekunden. Im Fall einer initial homogenen Oberflächenladungsverteilung nimmt die mittlere Ladungsdichte in einer Größenordnung von Sekunden monoton ab. Dieser Prozess stellt einen Ladungsabbau dar, dessen zeitliches Verhalten durch zwei überlagerte Exponentialfunktionen beschreiben ließ. Dadurch werden zwei Ladungsträgerpopulationen im BSO angenommen, die verschieden abgebaut werden. Im Fall einer initial inhomogenen Ladungsdichteverteilung wird ein Transport elektrischer Ladung auf der BSO-Oberfläche in einer Größenordnung von Sekunden beobachtet. Es wird weiterhin erstmals die durch einen Atmosphärendruck-Plasmajet deponierten Ladungen auf BSO zeitaufgelöst gemessen. Die zeitliche Entwicklung der Oberflächenladungen kann mit der Messung des elektrischen Stroms an einer der Ringelektroden des Jets korreliert werden. Dadurch wird geschlossen, dass der Ladungsaustauch nicht direkt durch einen Bullet verursacht wird. Er erzeugt stattdessen einen elektrisch leitfähigen Kanal zwischen der Düse des Jets zur BSO-Oberfläche. Infolgedessen kann Ladung, die sich auf der Innenseite der Jetkapillare befindet, auf den BSO-Kristall transportiert werden. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit werden Kenngrößen entwickelt, die den Ordnungszustand einer aus Einzelobjekten zusammengesetzten Entladungsstruktur quantitativ beschreiben. Die Kenngrößen werten dabei die laterale Leuchtdichteverteilung der Entladungsemisssion, u.a. auf Basis der Tripel-Korrelationsfunktion. Dabei werden zwei separate Bifurkationsspannungen zwischen einer hexagonalen und einer ungeordneten Anordnung beobachtet: Bei der Verringerung der Spannung wird zunächst der Bifurkationspunkt der azimutalen Ordnung durchlaufen und anschließend der Bifurkationspunkt der radialen Ordnung. Die Systeme gehen jeweils in einen Zustand geringerer Ordnung über. Die Ursache des Ordnungsverlusts ist das zunehmende Fehlen von Entladungsspots, was im Mittel zu einer geringeren Wechselwirkung der Spots untereinander führt und das System an Freiheitsgraden gewinnt. Im dritten Teil dieser Arbeit wird erstmals ein Ansatz verfolgt, der die Steuerung lateral strukturierter Entladungen ermöglicht. Dafür wurde ein Aufbau konstruiert, bei dem ein gekühlter Halbleiter als Dielektrikum in der Entladungszelle dient. Dessen externe Beleuchtung führt bei einer anliegenden Spannung zu einer Änderung des Spannungsteilerverhältnisses der kapazitiven Elemente und schließlich zu einer lokalen Erhöhung der Spannung über dem Entladungsraum. Die Größe und Leuchtintensität der durch die Beleuchtung gezündeten Entladung ist stark abhängig von der beleuchteten Fläche, der Leistungsdichte der Beleuchtung und der anliegenden Spannung.
Polyelektrolyt-Multischichtfilme (PEMs) werden durch schichtweise (eng. Layer by Layer, LbL)
sequentielle Ablagerung von entgegengesetzt geladenen Polyelektrolyten auf einer
geladenen Oberfläche hergestellt. Die LbL Methode kann auf verschiedene Weise zur
Herstellung von PEM eingesetzt werden, z.B. durch Tauchen, Rotation, Sprühen oder
Beschichten mit elektromagnetischen und fluidischen Methoden. In allen Artikeln dieser
Dissertation wurde die Tauchmethode verwendet. Durch zyklische Wiederholung der
Abscheidungsschritte kann die Dicke der PEM leicht gesteuert werden. Die Oberflächen und
Grenzflächen des Films können mit der LbL Technik auch durch die elektrostatische
Wechselwirkung zwischen positiv und negativ geladenen Polyelektrolyten modifiziert werden.
Auf diese Weise lassen sich einige Eigenschaften des Films optimieren, beispielsweise
Oberflächenadhäsion und Biokompatibilität, z. B. in der Gewebezüchtung oder es kann
eine Monoschicht als Barriere an der Grenzfläche des Films adsorbiert werden, um die
Diffusion von Molekülen im Film zu begrenzen z.B. bei Aufnahme oder Freisetzen von
Medikamenten.
Daher wurde die Rolle einiger Faktoren, wie die molare Masse der Polyelektrolyte und das
Vorhandensein von Salzionen in der Präparationslösung auf die interne Struktur sowie die
Oberfläche der PEMs untersucht.
Für alle Untersuchungen dieser Dissertation wurde das häufig verwendete Modell-System aus
dem positiv geladenen Polyelektrolyten Polydimethyldiallylammonium (PDADMA), und dem
negativ geladenen Polyelektrolyten Polystyrolsulfonat (PSS), verwendet. Die Dicke der Filme
wurde mit Röntgenreflektometrie, Ellipsometrie, UV-Vis-NIR-Spektrometrie bestimmt die
interne Struktur mit Neutronenreflektometrie und die Oberflächentopografie mit Rasterkraftmikroskopie
(eng. AFM) und Rasterelektronenmikroskopie (eng. SEM).
In Artikel 1 wurde mit Hilfe der Neutronenreflektometrie die Struktur des Filmes und die
Diffusion des Polyanions PSS (DPSS) senkrecht zur PEM Oberfläche untersucht. Variiert wurde
die molare Masse des Polykations PDADMA und die Salzkonzentration der
Präparationslösung. PEMs wurden aus drei verschiedenen NaCl-Konzentrationen in der
Abscheidelösung hergestellt: 10 mmol/L, 100 mmol/L und 200 mmol/L. Die Salzkonzentration
in der Polyelektrolytlösung bestimmt die Konformation der Polyelektrolyte während der
Adsorption. Die Ketten werden weniger flach adsorbiert, wenn mehr Salzionen in der
Adsorptionslösung vorhanden sind und die Filme werden dicker.
Die Diffusion nahm mit zunehmender molarer Masse von PDADMA in Filmen, die aus 10
mmol/L, 100 mmol/L und 200 mmol/L hergestellt wurden, um mindestens drei Größenordnungen
ab, denn die Zunahme der Kettenlänge, erhöht den Vernetzungsgrad im Film. Dabei zeigten Filme aus 10 mmol/L (NaCl) mit einer niedrigen molaren Masse von PDADMA
die größte Diffusion (DPSS = 4.9 × 10−20 m2/s). Der Diffusionskoeffizient DPSS als Funktion des
Polymerisationsgrades folgt zwei Potenzgesetzen mit einem Übergang bei einem
Polymerisationsgrad von 288. Bei kürzeren Ketten stimmt der Exponent des Potenzgesetzes
gut mit dem Modell der Sticky Reptation überein. Bei längeren Ketten war der Exponent viel
größer, was vermuten lässt, dass die PSS-Ketten in einem zunehmend komplexen
Polymernetzwerk gefangen sind. Wir verstehen den Übergang als Verschränkungsgrenze für
das untersuchte System.
Bei PEMs, die aus 100 mmol/L hergestellt wurden, konnte kein Potenzgesetz festgestellt
werden. DPSS nahm sprunghaft um drei Größenordnungen ab, wenn die molare Masse von
PDADMA von 45 kDa auf 72 kDa erhöht wurde.
In Artikel 2 wurden die Oberfläche von PEMs aus Polyelektrolyten unterschiedlicher molarer
Massen untersucht. Die Oberflächenrauhigkeit und die Dicke des Films wurden mit
Röntgenreflektometrie und Ellipsometrie bestimmt. Die Oberflächentopografie wurde mit AFM
und SEM aufgenommen. Alle PEMs wurden aus PE-Lösungen mit 0,1 mol/L NaCl hergestellt.
Die Oberfläche der PEM, präpariert aus langem PSS und kurzem PDADMA oder langem PSS
und langem PDADMA, war immer flach. Bei einer Filmzusammensetzung aus langen
Polykationen (Mw (PDADMAlang) = 322 kDa) und kurzen PSS Molekülen (Mw (PSSkurz) = 10,7
kDa) wurden drei Wachstumsregime identifiziert: exponentiell, parabolisch und linear. Im
exponentiellen Wachstumsregime bildet sich nach etwa sieben Beschichtungsschritten von
PDADMA/PSS (eng. bilayers, bl) eine granulare Oberflächenstruktur aus mit einer
Oberflächenrauigkeit von 1,6 nm und einer lateralen Periodizität von 70 nm. Mit zunehmender
Schichtzahl nimmt die Oberflächenrauhigkeit sowie die laterale Periodizität zu. Im
parabolischen Wachstumsbereich aggregieren die Strukturen zu Säulen, mit einer
Oberflächenrauigkeit bis zu 23 nm und einer lateralen Periodizität bis zu 210 nm. Im linearen
Wachstumsregime sind die säulenförmigen Domänen vollständig ausgebildet und die
Oberflächenstruktur ändert sich nicht mehr. Diese Strukturen wurden schon während der
Präparation, bereits vor dem Trocknen beobachtet. Dies zeigt, dass sich die Strukturen
während der Abscheidung von PDADMA/PSS bilden.
Bei Beobachtungen im Vakuum (SEM) war im linearen Bereich die Säulenstruktur bei der
PDADMA terminierten PEM ausgeprägter als bei der PSS terminierten.
Diese Strukturen bilden sich nur im Film mit anfänglichem exponentiellem Wachstum, d.h.
wenn kurzen Ketten durch den ganzen Film diffundieren können. Das legt nahe, dass es für
die Strukturbildung nicht ausreicht, dass der Polyelektrolyt kurz ist, sondern dass es auch
beweglich sein muss. Um dies näher zu untersuchen wurde in Manuskript 1 die molare Masse des PSS variiert. Es
wurden PEMs aus langem 322 kDa PDADMA und kurzem 6,5 kDa und 3,9 kDa PSS
hergestellt und mit den Messungen von PEMs aus 10,7 kDa PSS verglichen.
Die Verkürzung von PSS hat subtile Auswirkungen auf den Filmaufbau und die
Selbststrukturierung. Für PEM aus PSS mit einer molaren Masse von 6,5 kDa konnten nur
zwei Wachstumsregime ermittelt werden: ein exponentielles und ein lineares Wachstumsregime.
Der Übergang vom exponentiellen zum linearen Wachstum erfolgte bei 28
Doppelschichten. Bei PEMs, die aus 3,9 kDa PSS hergestellt wurden, wurde bis zu 29 bl nur
ein exponentielles Wachstum beobachtet. Dies zeigt, dass eine Verringerung der molaren
Masse von PSS das exponentielle Wachstum auf eine größere Anzahl von abgeschiedenen
Doppelschichten ausdehnt. Dies ist auf die zunehmende PSS-Diffusion zurückzuführen.
In allen Filmen wurden Selbststrukturierungen beobachtet. Der Abstand und die Höhe der
säulenartigen Domänen nehmen mit jeder abgeschiedenen PDADMA/PSS-Doppelschicht
deutlich zu. Der durchschnittliche Domänenabstand ändert sich weniger und korreliert mit den
vertikalen Wachstumsregimen. Der Domänenabstand schwankt zwischen 70 nm und 750 nm.
Die größten lateralen Abstände und ein längeres exponentielles Wachstumsregime wurden
mit dem kürzesten PSS (3,9 kDa) erreicht, was auf die hohe Mobilität des PSS zurückgeführt
wird. Die Domänenhöhe ist immer kleiner als der Domänenabstand. Wenn die PEM mit
PDADMA terminiert ist, sind die Oberflächenrauhigkeit und der durchschnittliche Abstand
größer als bei PSS terminierten Filme in Wasser und nach dem Trocknen.
Darüber hinaus wurden zwischen den Domänen Filamente beobachtet. Die Filamente
bestehen aus PDADMA/PSS-Komplexen. Eine mögliche Vermutung ist, dass diese Komplexe
zwischen den Domänen diffundieren und ihren Abstand anpassen.
Die Oberflächenstruktur des Films aus PSS 10,7 kDa zeigt eine symmetrische gaußförmige
Höhenverteilung in allen drei Wachstumsregimen von 5 bis 40 bl. Für die kurze PSS war eine
solche Verteilung nur bis 15 bl (6,5 kDa) bzw. 20 bl (3,9 kDa) zu beobachten. Danach wurde
für 6,5 kDa schiefe Verteilung mit Ausläufern zu größeren Höhen beobachtet. 3,9 kDa PSS
zeigte dann sogar eine bimodale Höhenverteilung.
Die lineare Ladungsdichte von PDADMA ist etwa halb so groß wie die von PSS. Folglich
adsorbiert PDADMA in einer bürstenartigen Konformation. Wenn die oberste Schicht
PDADMA ist, dann ist das PDADMA-Molekül nicht fest an die Oberfläche gebunden. Daher ist
die durch die Oberflächenspannung erzeugte Kraft für PDADMA groß genug, um zu einer
Veränderung der Oberflächenmorphologie und folglich zu einer kleineren Gesamtoberfläche
zu führen.Außerdem sind die Domänen in 1 M NaCl-Lösung stabil, schrumpfen aber in 2 M NaCl enorm,
während ihr Abstand leicht zunimmt.
Diese Untersuchungen zeigten, dass die Mobilität des Polyelektrolyten PSS die
Voraussetzung für den Aufbau einer strukturierten Oberfläche in einem PEM-System aus
PDADMA/PSS ist. Diese Ergebnisse zeigten auch, dass die Verkürzung der Kette der PSS Moleküle
die Herstellung von Filmen erleichtert, deren Dicke und Selbststrukturierung je nach
dem gewünschten Zweck angepasst werden kann. Solche Filme können in der Medizin und
Biologie als geeignetes Substrat zur Optimierung der Adsorption von Zellen und anderen
Molekülen oder als Nanofilter effektiv eingesetzt werden.
In dieser Dissertation konnte ich zeigen, wie die Verkürzung der Kette der PSS-Moleküle zur
Bildung einer lateralen selbststrukturierten Oberfläche führt und wie die zunehmende Mobilität
der PSS-Moleküle die Oberflächenmorphologie signifikant beeinflusst.
Diese Arbeit untersucht experimentell den Einfluss des metastabilen Zustandes Xe(1s3) und des Resonanzzustandes Xe(1s2) auf die VUV-Strahlungserzeugung in Helium-Xenon-Glimmentladungen (He:Xe = 98:2). Für die Bestimmung der Atomdichten wurde eine experimentelle Anordnung geschaffen, mit der, basierend auf der Methode der Laser-Atom-Absorptionsspektroskopie, orts- und zeitaufgelöste Messungen von optischen Dichten im Säulenplasma durchgeführt wurden. Als Hintergrundstrahlungsquelle kam ein durchstimmbarer Diodenlaser zum Einsatz. Die bereitgestellten Laserwellenlängen von 820 nm bzw. 826 nm entsprechen optischen Übergängen zwischen den Xenonzuständen 6s' 1/2[1/2]0 --> 6p' 1/2[3/2]1 (1s3 --> 2p4) und 6s' 1/2[1/2]1 --> 6p' 1/2[1/2]1 (1s2 --> 2p2).
Den Ausgangspunkt der Untersuchungen stellte die Messung der Absorptionslinienprofile beider Nahinfrarot-Übergänge dar. In Abhängigkeit von den Entladungsparametern Gasdruck, Entladungsstrom und Betriebsweise (Gleichstrom-, gepulste und Wechselstromentladung) wurden daraus die Dichten der angeregten Atome auf der Entladungsachse ermittelt. Durch die Analyse des Abklingens der Besetzungsdichten im Afterglow von gepulst betriebenen Entladungen mit Hilfe eines Systems von gekoppelten Ratengleichungen konnten die dominanten Stoßprozesse für die betrachteten Zustände identifiziert werden. Erstmalig ist in dieser Arbeit die radiale Verteilung der angeregten Spezies Xe(1s3) und Xe(1s2) in He-Xe-Glimmentladungen untersucht worden. Damit ist die VUV-Strahlungsleistung der 129 nm-Linie aus der Dichteverteilung der Resonanzatome ermittelbar.
In the last decade a new domain has developed in plasma physics: plasma medicine. Despite the successes that have already been achieved in this exciting new field, the interaction of plasmas with “biological materials” is not yet fully understood. Further investigations in particular with respect to the properties of the applied plasmas sources are therefore essential in order to decode this complex interaction process. Currently, a great variety of different discharge types are used in plasma medical investigation which are generally are operated in noble gases like helium and argon or with dry air. In the present work, the main focuses is on the diagnostics of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) resulting from the plasma chemistry of an argon radio-frequency (RF) atmospheric pressure plasma jet (APPJ) and its interaction with the ambient atmosphere. To conduct this study, a commercially available plasma device, so-called kinpen is used due to its technical development maturity and its accessibility on the market. As a method of choice, diagnostic techniques are based on optical spectroscopy known to be a reliable tool to investigate plasmas. Consequently, three complementary optical laser diagnostics, namely quantum cascade laser absorption spectroscopy (QCLAS), laser induced fluorescence (LIF) and planar single shot LIF (PLIF), have been successfully applied to the plasma jet itself or its effluent. All of these diagnostics offer a high species selectivity and an excellent spatial and temporal resolution. They are used in this work for i) the characterization of the plasma chemical dynamics with respect to the generation of biological active RONS – in particular for the case of N2 and O2 admixtures. ii) the measurement of the NO density profile in the plasma effluent iii) the investigation of the flow characteristics of the neutral gas component (laminar vs. turbulent) and its influence on the plasma chemistry. Numerical analysis have been carried out in collaboration with PLASMANT (University of Antwerp) via kinetic simulations of the entire plasma chemistry. Expectingly, atomic oxygen (O) and nitric oxide (NO) turn out to be precursors of ozone (O3) and nitric dioxide (NO2). However, it was intriguing to unveil that atomic oxygen and nitrogen metastable (N2(A)) play together a key part --as intermediate species-- in the generation of more stable RONS, e.g. NO. The absolute density of NO space resolved was measured by LIF and absolutely calibrated molecular beam mass spectrometer. LIF was used to determine relative density of OH radical in the plasma plume. 2D-LIF was used to investigate the gas flow pattern with OH as a flow tracer. The results are discussed in details and show different operating mode of the jet, e.g. laminar or turbulent and that the plasma influences these regimes. The first detection and relative measurement by LIF of nitrogen metastable (N2(A)) produced by an argon APPJ is also shortly reported in this work. The outcome of this thesis will bring new insights in the field of argon APPJs chemistry and its interaction with the ambient atmosphere which can be valuable to support plasma modelling and to consider for the applications in plasma medicine.
This thesis describes how the data of the Langmuir probes in the Wendelstein 7-X (W7X) Test Divertor Unit (TDU) were evaluated, checked for consistency with other diagnostics and used to analyse plasma detachment.
Langmuir probes are an electronic diagnostic, and were among the first to be used in plasma physics to determine particle fluxes, potentials, temperatures and densities.
W7X is a large, advanced stellarator, magnetic confinement fusion experiment, operated at the Max-Planck-Institut for Plasma Physics(IPP) in Greifswald, Germany.
Its TDU is an uncooled graphite component, shaped and positioned to intercept the convective heat load of the plasma.
Detachment describes a desirable operation state of strongly reduced loads on this component.
The evaluation of Langmuir probe data relies heavily on models of the sheath, formed at the interface between plasma and a solid surface, to infer plasma parameters from the directly measured quantities.
Multiple such models are analysed, generalised, and adapted to our use case.
A detailed comparison is made to determine the most suitable model, as this choice strongly affects the predicted parameters.
Special attention is paid to uncertainties on the parameters, which are determined using a Bayesian framework.
From the inferred parameters, heat and particle fluxes are calculated.
These are also indirectly measured by two other, camera-based diagnostic systems.
Observations are compared to test the validity of assumptions and calculations in the evaluation of all three diagnostics by checking their results for consistency.
The first comparison, with the infrared emission camera system, shows good agreement with theoretical predictions and reported measurements of the sheath transmission factor, for which we derive and measure a value in W7X.
Parameter dependencies in the quality of this agreement hint at remaining issues.
The second comparison, with the Hydrogen alpha photon flux camera system, shows significant discrepancy with expectations.
These are argued to originate from systematic differences in the measurement locations, which are quantified and related to the magnetic topology.
Langmuir probe observations of individual discharges are analysed to discuss conditions under which detachment occurs, transition into that state and fluctuations observed prior to and during it.
A spatial parametrisation of the data is developed and used to facilitate this.
These observations contribute to the larger aim of understanding particle balance control and fusion plasma edge processes.
Polyelektrolyt-Multischichten (PEMs) werden durch sequentielle Adsorption von entgegengesetzt geladenen Polyelektrolyten (PE) auf festen Substraten adsorbiert. Die Layer-by-Layer Präparation ermöglicht es cm2 große Flächen zu beschichten und außerdem die Möglichkeit die Molekülanordnung senkrecht zur Substratoberfläche im nm-Bereich zu kontrollieren. Der Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit ist die Untersuchung der Adsorption hinsichtlich des Molekulargewichts der beteiligten PEs von PEMs bestehend aus dem Polykation Polydiallyldimethylammonium (PDADMA) und dem Polyanion Polystyrolsulfonat (PSS). Zu diesem Zweck wird das Schichtwachstum unter in-situ Bedingungen mittels der Ellipsometrie untersucht. Das Schichtwachstum im Fall von PDADMA/PSS Multischichten verläuft nichtlinear mit der Anzahl an deponierten Schichtpaaren. Dabei wird das nichtlineare Wachstumsregime durch die unterschiedliche Linienladungsdichte zwischen einer PDADMA und PSS Kette in Verbindung gebracht. Die quantitative Analyse der Messungen zeigt, dass alle untersuchten PDADMA/PSS Multischichten präpariert aus 0,1 M NaCl bei Raumtemperatur mindestens zwei verschiedene Wachstumsregimes aufweisen. Zunächst wächst die Schicht parabolisch bis sie nach Nlin Schichtpaaren in ein lineares Wachstumsregime übergeht. Dieses wird durch einen konstanten Schichtdickenzuwachs pro adsorbiertes Schichtpaar Δdlin charakterisiert. Das Adsorptionsverhalten der PDADMA und PSS Ketten wird analysiert indem das Molekulargewicht Mw der Polyelektrolyte systematisch variiert wird (zwischen Mw(PDADMA)=24 kDa…322 kDa, sowie Mw(PSS)=8,6 kDa…168 kDa). Eine Analyse der Schichtparameter Nlin und Δdlin ergibt bei hohen Molekulargewichten von PDADMA und PSS, dass Nlin und Δdlin unabhängig von den jeweiligen Molekulargewichten sind (Nlin=15 und Δdlin=12,3 ± 1,3 nm). Reduziert man das Molekulargewicht von PDADMA auf einen Wert unterhalb eines Schwellwertes von Mw (PDADMA)=80 kDa, so nehmen Nlin und Δdlin linear ab. Unterschreitet das PSS-Molekulargewicht den Schwellwert Mw (PSS)=25 kDa, beobachtet man den gegenteiligen Effekt: beide Wachstumsparameter Nlin und Δdlin nehmen zu und ein zusätzliches exponentielles Wachstumsregime tritt auf. Damit wächst die Multischicht zunächst exponentiell, geht nach Nexp Schichtpaaren ins parabolische Wachstum bis dieses nach Nlin Schichtpaaren ins lineare Wachstumsregime übergeht. Neutronenreflexionsmessungen mit selektiv deuterierten PSS Schichten zeigen eine Diffusion der leichten PSS Ketten innerhalb der Multischicht. Ein solches Diffusionsverhalten ist typisch für exponentiell wachsende Schichten und wurde bereits theoretisch vorhergesagt. Um den molekularen Mechanismus der Adsorptionsprozesse besser zu verstehen, werden PEMs aus binären Mischungen präpariert. Diese setzen sich aus einem Molekulargewicht oberhalb und unterhalb des jeweiligen Schwellwertes (Mw(PDADMA)=80 kDa bzw. Mw(PSS)=25 kDa) zusammen. Dabei wird der Molenbruch des schweren Polyelektrolyts (ΦPDADMA(Mw(PDADMA)>80 kDa) bzw. ΦPSS(Mw(PSS)>25 kDa)) variiert. Im Falle der binären PDADMA Mischung beinhaltet die Adsorptionslösung Moleküle mit den Molekulargewichten Mw(PDADMA)= 35 kDa und 322 kDa. Ellipsometrische Messungen zeigen einen linearen Anstieg der Schichtparameter Nlin und Δdlin mit Erhöhung des Molenbruchs ΦPDADMA(322 kDa). Daraus wird gefolgert, dass die Zusammensetzung in der Adsorptionslösung derjenigen in der Multischicht entspricht. Es wird eine Formel zur Bestimmung der Schichparameter Nlin und Δdlin entwickelt, die zumindest auch auf ternäre Mischungen anwendbar ist. Damit lassen sich die Schichtparameter Nlin und Δdlin bei bekannten Molenbrüchen ΦPDADMA(Mw(PDADMA)) vorhersagen. Der Einfluss der Zusammensetzung der PSS-Adsorptionslösung zeigt ein anderes Verhalten: Die Zusammensetzung des Films entspricht hier nicht derjenigen der Adsorptionslösung. Bereits bei einem Anteil von ΦPSS (76 kDa) = 5% des schweren PSSd Moleküls (95% der Moleküle in der Adsorptionslösung sind leichte PSS Moleküle), findet einerseits kein exponentielles Wachstum statt und die Wachstumsparameter Nlin und Δdlin entsprechen denen solcher PEMs, welche ausschließlich aus schweren PSS Molekülen präpariert wurden. Neutronenreflexionsmessungen bei binären PSS-Mischungen mit schwerem deuteriertem PSSd und leichtem protonierten PSS zeigen, dass bei einer Adsorptionszeit von 30 min, ab ΦPSSd (80,8 kDa)=5% (ΦPSS(10,6 kDa)=95%) lediglich das schwere PSSd in die Multischicht eingebaut wurde. Durch die Streulängendichte wird die genaue Anzahl der PSS bzw. PSSd Moleküle in den PEM quantifiziert und damit die Menge an deponiertem Material bestimmt. Eine Hypothese ist, dass die leichten Moleküle die Oberfläche zwar schneller erreichen, in die Multischicht gelangen und durch den Film diffundieren. Dabei können diese gemäß der IN und OUT Diffusion den Film auch wieder verlassen. Um dies zu verifizieren wird die Adsorptionszeit der PSS Moleküle bei einer binären PSS Mischung mit ΦPSSd(80,8 kDa)=5% reduziert.
Die vorliegende Arbeit widmet sich der plasmachemischen Herstellung und physikalisch-chemischen Charakterisierung von dünnen organischen Schichten auf der Basis von Ethylenglykol (Präkursor). Die Oberflächen können die Adsorption von Proteinen minimieren und daher als neues biokompatibles Material getestet werden. Im Schwerpunkt der Arbeit liegt die Entwicklung eines plasmachemischen RF-Reaktors (genannt Nevada) und einer innovativen Beschichtungstechnologie TFPD (Temperature Forced Plasma Deposition) als Erweiterung der PECVD (Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapour Deposition). Ein Gemisch aus Ethylenglykol und Argon wurde als Modellsystem untersucht. Die Plasmabedingungen und die Oberflächentemperatur wurden optimiert und an Phaseneigenschaften von Ethylenglykol angepasst. Die komplexe Polykondensation steht für die plasmagestützte Umwandlung der Kondensatschicht zu einem stabilen Poly(Ethylenglykol)-ähnlichen Plasmapolymer. Der Prozess wurde durch die simultane Temperaturkontrolle und in situ FTIR-Spektroskopie analysiert. Zur Untersuchung der erzeugten Proben wurden weitere ex situ Oberflächenanalysen wie XPS, AFM, TDS, MALDI, XRD und die optische Ellipsometrie verwendet. Durch die neue Methode TFPD entstehen extrem glatte, amorphe und wasserunlösliche Schichten mit einem Potenzial für die Biokompatibilität.
Kinetik der Ladungsträger und neutralen Spezies in anisothermen, molekularen Entladungsplasmen
(2009)
In dieser Arbeit wurde die Kinetik geladener und neutraler Spezies in anisothermen, molekularen Niederdruckentladungsplasmen untersucht. Als Arbeitsgas wurde Sauerstoff gewählt, da es noch eine Reihe grundlegender Fragen zu beantworten gibt und da Sauerstoff für viele technische Anwendungen von Interesse ist. Für eine adäquate Beschreibung des Elektronensubsystems wurde die stationäre, räumlich inhomogene kinetische Gleichung der Elektronen gelöst und die Elektronengeschwindigkeitsverteilungsfunktion (EVDF) bestimmt. Auf der Grundlage einer Legendre-Polynomentwicklung wurde eine strikte Multiterm-Beschreibung entwickelt, mit deren Hilfe die EVDF unter Vorgabe realistischer Potentialverläufe zwischen den Elektroden und der Plasmazusammensetzung im Druckbereich von 1 bis ~100 Pa bestimmt wurde. Es konnte der wesentliche Einfluß der dissipativen Stoßterme zur räumlichen Relaxation der EVDF erstmals für Sauerstoff gezeigt werden. In Bereichen kleiner Drücke ist ein Verhalten zu finden, welches typisch für Strahlelektronen ist, d.h. die an der Kathode eingestreute Elektronengruppe wandert praktisch ohne Dämpfung bis zur Anode. Dies spiegelt sich auch in den makroskopischen Größen wider, die im gesamten Entladungsgebiet eine starke räumliche Struktur aufweisen. Bei einer Druckerhöhung ist eine schnelle räumliche Relaxation der EVDF zu beobachten, die bereits beim Verlassen des Kathodenfallgebiets annähernd abgeschlossen ist. Damit in Verbindung stehen räumlich konstante Transportgrößen für die Elektronen oder deren mittlere kinetische Energie. Weiterhin wurde ein System hydrodynamischer Bilanzgleichungen für die betrachteten Spezies in Sauerstoff-Glimmentladungen abgeleitet, welches gekoppelt mit der Poisson-Gleichung gelöst wurde. Somit konnten die Dichten und Ströme der Spezies sowie das elektrische Potential selbstkonsistent bestimmt werden. Für die Analysen wurde ein reaktionskinetisches Modell für Sauerstoff entwickelt, welches alle relevanten Spezies und die zugehörigen Reaktionskanäle enthält. Insbesondere können in den hier betrachteten Plasmen mit Drücken um 100 Pa O2(b 1Σg+), O3 sowie O+ und O2- vernachlässigt werden. Somit war es möglich, sowohl das Startverhalten als auch den stationären Zustand der betrachteten Sauerstoff-Entladungen zu charakterisieren. Dabei konnte festgestellt werden, daß die metastabilen Moleküle O2(a 1Δg) keinen Einfluß auf kurze anormale Glimmentladungen haben, da ihre Dichte im Vergleich zum Bereich der positiven Säule äußerst gering ist. Dagegen wirken sich die negativen Ionen O- merklich auf die Formierung des Raumladungsfelds aus und müssen Berücksichtigung finden. Anhand einer Radiofrequenzentladung konnte zudem der Einfluß der Lokalen-Feld-Näherung (LFA) als auch der Lokalen-Mittleren-Energie-Näherung (LMEA) für die elektronischen Größen auf das Entladungsverhalten gezeigt werden. Hierbei konnte in Übereinstimmung mit der kinetischen Analyse der Elektronen festgestellt werden, daß die LFA zu einer erheblichen Überschätzung der entsprechenden Größen führt und zur nichtlokalen Beschreibung ungeeignet ist. Daher ist die Anwendung der LMEA im Rahmen einer hydrodynamischen Beschreibung zu empfehlen. Weiterhin wurde ein Hybrid-Verfahren entwickelt, welches eine kinetische Beschreibung der Elektronenkomponente sowie eine hydrodynamische Beschreibung der Spezies beinhaltet. Diese Methode wurde angewendet, um den stationären Zustand einer anormalen Sauerstoff-Glimmentladung zu bestimmen. Dabei wurden die Ratenkoeffizienten der Elektronenstoßprozesse auf einem kinetischen Niveau bestimmt und in der hydrodynamischen Beschreibung verwendet, so daß die Qualität der theoretischen Beschreibung wesentlich verbessert wurde. Dieses Verfahren wurde für einen direkten Vergleich mit den bisher durchgeführten rein hydrodynamischen Rechnungen genutzt. Dabei konnte wiederum festgestellt werden, daß die Ratenkoeffizienten in der Lokalen-Feld-Näherung überschätzt werden, was zum einen zu hohe Raten und Teilchendichten zur Folge hat und zum anderen auch die Entladungsparameter für einen erfolgreichen Durchbruch nicht korrekt charakterisiert.
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 thesis constitutes a computational study of charge and ion drag force on micron-sized dust particles immersed in rf discharges. Knowledge of dust parameters like dust charge, floating potential, shielding and ion drag force is very crucial for explaining complex laboratory dusty plasma phenomena, such as void formation in microgravity experiments and wakefield formation in the sheaths. Existing theoretical models assume standard distribution functions for plasma species and are applicable over a limited range of flow velocities and collisionality. Kinetic simulations are suitable tools for studying dust charging and drag force computation. The main aim of this thesis is to perform three dimensional simulations using a Particle-Particle-Particle-Mesh ($P^3M$) model to understand how the dust parameters vary for different positions of dust in rf discharges and how these parameters on a dust evolve in the presence of neighboring dust particles. At first, rf discharges in argon have been modelled using a three-dimensional PIC-MCC code for the discharge conditions relevant to the dusty plasma experiments. All necessary elastic and inelastic collisions have been considered. The plasma background is found collisional, charge-exchange collisions between ions and neutrals being dominant. Electron and ion distributions are non-Maxwellian. The dominant heating mechanism is Ohmic. Then, simulations have been done to compute the dust parameters for various sizes of dust located at different positions in the rf discharges. Dust charge and floating potential in the presheath are slightly larger than the values in the bulk due to the higher electron flux to the dust particle in the presheath. From presheath to the sheath the charge and floating potential values decrease due to the decrease of the electron current to the dust. A linear dependence of dust potential on dust size has been found, which results in a nonlinear dependence of the dust charge with the dust size when the particle is assumed to be a spherical capacitor. This has been verified by independently counting the charges collected by the dust. %where indeed it has been noted that the dust charge %scales nonlinearly with the dust size. The computed dust parameters are also compared with theoretical models. Simulated dust floating potentials are comparable to values obtained from Allen-Boyd-Reynolds (ABR) and Khrapak models, but much smaller than the values obtained from Orbit Motion Limited (OML) model. The dust potential distribution behaves Debye-H\"{u}ckel-like. The shielding lengths are in between ion and electron Debye lengths. % indicating shielding by both ions and electrons. Further, the orbital drag force is typically larger than the collection drag force. The total drag force for the collisional case is larger than for the collisionless case and it scales nonlinearly with the dust size. The collection drag values and size-scaling agrees with Zobnin's model. The charging and drag force computation is then extended to two and multiple static dust particles in the rf discharge to study the influence of neighboring dust particles on the dust parameters. Initially, the dust parameters on two dust particles are computed for various interparticle separation distances and for dust particles placed at different locations in the rf discharge. It is observed that for dust separations larger than the shielding length the dust parameters for the two dust particles match with the single dust particle values. As the dust separation is equal to or less than the shielding length the ion drag force increases due to the buildup of a parallel drag force component. However, the main dust properties like charge, potential, vertical component of ion drag are not affected considerably. This is attributed to the smaller collection impact parameter values compared to the dust separation. %This is because the %collection impact parameter values in the sheath and the presheath are smaller %than the smallest dust separation and in case of the dust in the bulk, the %collection impact parameter is comparable with the dust separation. Then the dust charges on multiple dust particles located at different positions in the discharge and arranged along the discharge axis are also computed. It is found that the charges of the multiple dust particles in the bulk or presheath do not differ much from the single particle values at that location. But the dust charges of multiple dust particles located in the sheath drastically differ from the single dust parameter values. Due to ion focusing from dust particles in the upper layers, the ion current increases to dust particles in the lower layers resulting in smaller charge values. This is as well the case where dust particles are vertically aligned as in the standard experiments of dusty plasmas. In conclusion, this work used a fully kinetic (PIC and MD or $P^3M$) model to study the physics of dust charging in rf plasmas. Our simulations revealed that the dust parameters vary considerably from the bulk to the sheath. The CX collisions increase flux to the dust thereby affecting the dust parameters and their scaling with dust size. Also, a dust particle affects the charging dynamics of its neighbor only when their separation is within the shielding length. In the plasma sheath, ion focussing can cause great reduction in dust charges.
Ion thrusters are Electric Propulsion systems used for satellites and space missions. Within
this work, the High Efficient Multistage Plasma Thruster (HEMP-T), patented by the
THALES group, is investigated. It relies on plasma production by magnetised electrons.
Since the confined plasma in the thruster channel is non-Maxwellian, the near-field plume
plasma is as well. Therefore, the Particle-In-Cell method combined with a Monte-Carlo
Collision model (PIC-MCC) is used to model both regions. In order to increase the sim-
ulated near-field plume region, a non-equidistant grid is utilised, motivated by the lower
plasma density in the plume. To minimise artificial self-forces at grid points bordered by
cells of different size a modified method for the electric field calculation was developed in
this thesis. In order to investigate the outer plume region, where electric field and collisions
are negligible, a ray-tracing Monte-Carlo model is used. With these simulation methods,
two main questions are addressed in this work.
What are the basic mechanisms for plasma confinement, plasma-wall-interaction
and thrust generation?
For the HEMP-T the plasma is confined by magnetic fields in the thruster channel, generated
by cylindrical permanent magnets with opposite polarity. Due to different Hall parameters,
electrons are magnetised, while ions are not. Therefore, the dominating electron transport
is parallel to the magnetic field lines. In the narrow cusp regions, the magnetic mirror effect
reduces the electron flux towards the wall and confines the electrons like in a magnetic
bottle. At the anode, propellant gas streams into the thruster channel, which gets ionised
by the electrons creating the plasma. As a result of the electron oscillation between the two
cusp regions, ionisation of the propellant gas is efficient.
The magnetic field configuration of the HEMP-T also influences the plasma potential inside
the thruster channel. Close to the symmetry axis, the mainly axial magnetic field results in
a flat potential. At the inner wall, the field configuration reduces the plasma wall interaction
to only the narrow cusp regions. Here, the floating potential of the dielectric channel wall
and its plasma sheath result in a rather low radial potential drop compared to the applied
anode potential. As a result, the electric potential is rather flat and impinging ions at the
thruster channel wall have energies below the sputter threshold energy of the wall material.
Therefore, no sputtering appears at the dielectric wall. At the thruster exit the confinement
by the magnetic field is weakened and the potential drops with nearly the full anode voltage.
The resulting electric field accelerates the generated ions into the plume and generate the
thrust, but they are also able to sputter surfaces. During terrestrial testing, sputteringat vacuum vessel walls leads to the production of impurities. The amount of back-flux
towards the channel exit is determined by the sputter yield of the vacuum chamber wall. A
large distance between thruster exit and vessel wall reduces the back-flux and smooths the
pattern of deposition inside the thruster channel. Dependent on their material, the evolving
deposited layers can get conductive, modify by this the potential distribution and reduce
the thrust.
For the HEMP-T, ions are mainly generated at high potential close to the applied anode
potential. Therefore, the accelerated ions producing the thrust gain the maximum energy
as observed in experiment. Ions emitted from the thruster into different angles in the
plume contribute mainly to the ion current at angles between 30 ◦ and 90 ◦ . They mainly
originate from ionisation at the thruster exit. The resulting angular distribution of the
ejected ion current is close to the one of the experiment, slightly shifted by about ten
degrees to higher emission angles. In front of the thruster exit, electrons are trapped by
electrostatics forces. This enhanced density allows ionisation and an additional electron
density structure establishes.
What are possible physics based ideas for optimisation of an ion thruster?
An optimised thruster should have a high ionisation rate inside the thruster channel, low
erosion and an ion angular distribution with small contributions at high angles for min-
imised thruster satellite interactions. In experiments, the HEMP-T satisfies already quite
nicely these requests. In the simulations, low erosion inside the thruster channel and angular
ion distributions close to the experimental data are demonstrated. However, the ionisation
efficiency is lower and radial ion losses are larger than in experiment. A possible explanation
of these differences is an underestimated transport perpendicular to the magnetic field lines,
well known for magnetised plasmas.
A successful example for an optimisation using numerical simulations is the reduction of
back-flux of sputtered impurities during terrestrial experiments by an improved set-up of
the vacuum vessel. The implementation of baffles reduces the back-flux towards the thruster
exit and therefore deposition inside the channel. These improvements were successfully im-
plemented in the experiment and showed a reduction of artefacts during long time measure-
ments. This leads to a stable performance, as it is expected in space.
Kinetic modeling and infrared spectroscopy of charge carriers across the plasma-wall interface
(2022)
In this thesis, charge transport at the plasma-wall interface is investigated theoretically, on a semiclassical, microscopic level. Based on the Boltzmann and Poisson equations a set of equations is derived and numerically solved to model charge carriers both within a semiconducting wall and a gaseous plasma in front of it. While the plasma is considered collision-free, within the solid, phonon collisions, as well as recombination processes between conduction band electrons and valence band holes are considered. This results, for the first time, in a self-consistent modeling of both the gaseous electron-ion plasma and the electron-hole plasma in the solid on the same footing. Utilizing specific approximations for different physical scenarios, numerical solutions are presented both for the floating and the electronically contacted (biased) interface. In the latter case, the current voltage characteristic is calculated and shown to heavily depend on the charge kinetics within the wall.
Furthermore, we present optical methods to measure the wall charge noninvasively. These utilize the influence of the deposited surplus charges on the optical reflection coefficient of the surface. By calculating the optical response of these charges, we show that the magnitude of the surface charge can be inferred from the change in the reflectivity of the surface caused by the presence of the plasma. While nonlocal effects are considered, it is shown analytically and numerically that these can be neglected at the scales of the considered physical systems.
The importance of ion propulsion devices as an option for in-space propulsion of space
crafts and satellites continues to grow. They are more efficient than conventional chemi-
cal thrusters, which rely on burning their propellant, by ionizing the propellant gas in a
discharge channel and emitting the heavy ions at very high velocities. The ion emission
region of a thruster is called the plume and extends several meters axially and radially
downstream from the exit of a thruster. This region is particularly important for the effi-
ciency of a thruster, because it determines energy and angular distribution of the emitted
ions. It also determines the interaction with the carrier space craft by defining the electric
potential shape and the fluxes and energies of the emitted high energy ions, which are the
key parameters for sputter erosion of satellite components such as solar panels. Developing
new ion thrusters is expensive because of the high number of prototypes and testing cycles
required. Numerical modeling can help to reduce the costs in thruster development, but
the vastly differing length and time scales of the system, particularly the large differences of
scales between the discharge chamber and the plume, make a simulation challenging. Often
both regions are considered to be decoupled and are treated with different models to make
their simulation technically feasible. The coupling between channel and plume plasmas and
its influence on each other is disregarded, because there is no interaction between the two
regions. Therefore, this thesis investigates the physical effects which arise from this cou-
pling as well as models suitable for an integrated simulation of the whole coupled problem
of channel and plume plasmas. For this purpose the High Efficiency Multistage Plasma
Thruster (HEMP-T) ion thruster is considered.
For the discharge channel plasma, a fully kinetic model is required and the Particle-in-Cell
(PIC) method is applied. The PIC method requires very high spatial and temporal resolu-
tions which makes it computationally costly. As a result, only the discharge channel and the
near-field plume close to the channel exit can be simulated. In the channel, the results show
that electrons are magnetized and follow the magnetic field lines. The orientation of the
magnetic field there is mostly parallel to the symmetry axis and the channel walls which re-
sults in a high parallel electron transport and leads to a flat electric potential and a reduced
plasma-wall sheath. Only at the magnetic cusps, which are characteristic of HEMP-Ts the
electrons are guided towards the wall, with ions following due to quasineutrality, where a
classical plasma-wall sheath develops. The ion-wall contact is thus limited to the cusp re-
gion. The small radial drop of the potential towards the wall gives rather low energies of
ions impinging at the wall and minimizes erosion in the HEMP-T.
In the near-field plume, which extends from the thruster exit plane to some centimeters
downstream, the ion emission characteristics is defined. The ratio of radial and axial elec-
tric field components in this region determines the ion emission angle which should be
minimized for maximum thruster efficiency. The plasma discharge in the channel produces
high plasma densities and the subsequent drop from plasma to vacuum potential occurs
further downstream for higher densities. This increases the ratio of radial and axial electric
field components because the plasma expands radially outside of the confinement from the
dielectric discharge channel walls. The potential structure in the near-field plume impacts
also the supply of electrons for the channel discharge because the electrons enter the channel
from the plume. An effect which arises from this coupling is the breathing mode oscilla-
tion. It is an oscillation which is observed in all plasma quantities and is located near the
thruster exit. The oscillation frequency measured in the simulation is in good agreement
with a predator-prey estimate which validates this ansatz. However, the electron tempera-
ture, assumed constant in the predator-prey model, correlates inversely with the oscillation,
i.e. it is minimal at the current maximum and vice versa, which contributes to the observed
oscillations. Because of the oscillation of the plasma number density, the potential drop also
oscillates in the exit region and thus the ratio of radial to axial electric field components,
which results in the oscillation of the mean ion emission angle.
Regarding suitable models for a combined simulation of channel and plume plasmas, the
PIC model for channel and near-field plume is explicitly coupled to a hybrid fluid-PIC
model for the plume. The latter treats the electrons as a fluid, hence increasing the effective
spatial and temporal resolutions which can be applied in the plume simulations at the cost
of reduced accuracy of the electron model. Plasma densities decrease by two orders of
magnitude two meters downstream from the channel exit. The explicitly coupled kinetic
and hybrid PIC models are well suited for the computation of a HEMP-T and its plume
expansion, but they disregard the coupling of channel and plume plasmas for which other
methods are necessary. For this purpose a new approach is presented with a proof-of-
principle validation. The limited spatial resolution in the plume can be overcome with the
mesh-coarsening method, which increases the resolution in regions of low plasma density
without numerical artifacts. Sub-cycling for the electrons in the plume can then be used
to increase the temporal resolution in the plume. The combination of both methods, called
the sub-cycling mesh-coarsening (SMC) algorithm in the scope of this work, promises high
savings in computational cost which can make a combined simulation of plume and channel
plasmas feasible.
In magnetisierten Plasmen kommt dem Verständnis von magnetischen Fluktuationen eine tragende Rolle hinsichtlich der Plasmadynamik zu. Diese Fluktuationen treten in Form linearer und nichtlinearer Wellenphänomene oder auch als Änderung der magnetischen Topologie auf. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Dissertation wurde der Einfluß von niederfrequenten elektromagnetischen Wellen und der von topologischen Magnetfeldänderungen durch magnetische Rekonnektion auf die Dynamik der Ionen experimentell untersucht. In dem linearen magnetisierten Laborexperiment VINETA wurden kinetische Alfvénwellen angeregt und durch detaillierte Messung der Dispersion mittels magnetischer Fluktuationsdiagnostiken eindeutig identifiziert. Für das Verständnis des Dispersionsverhaltens müssen die Berandung der Wellen und der Einfluß von Stößen einbezogen werden. Mittels laserinduzierter Fluoreszenz (LIF) wurde die Ionenenergieverteilungsfunktion (IEVF) gemessen. Dabei wurde das Schema dahingehend erweitert, daß bei periodischen Störungen des Plasmas phasenaufgelöste Messungen der IEVF durchgeführt werden können. Die elektrischen Felder der durch vergleichsweise kleine magnetische Störungen angeregten linearen Alfvénwellen sind jedoch in der Regel zu klein, um einen signifikanten Einfluß auf die Ionendynamik zu nehmen. Anders verhält es sich jedoch bei einem stark nicht-linearem Anregungssschema: Die Welle-Teilchen Wechselwirkung konnte für nichtlineare Anregung Alfvénischer Wellen durch amplitudenmodulierte Helikoneigenmoden mittels LIF nachgewiesen werden. In dem toroidalen Experiment VTF kann magnetische Rekonnektion periodisch und unter reproduzierbaren Bedingungen angetrieben werden. Diese Voraussetzungen ermöglichen systematische Untersuchungen der Rückwirkung magnetischer Rekonnektion auf die Ionendynamik mittels LIF. Dabei ist es zum ersten Mal gelungen, eine Ionenheizung als Folge von Rekonnektion direkt nachzuweisen. Ferner konnte gezeigt werden, daß diese Heizung stark lokalisiert ist und nur am magnetischen X-Punkt, dem Ort der Rekonnektion, auftritt. Mittels zeitaufgelöster Messungen konnte ein kausaler Zusammenhang zwischen der Rekonnektionsrate und der Ionenheizung gezeigt werden. Desweiteren wurden starke nicht-thermische Komponenten der IEVF diagnostiziert, die mit der beobachteten Ionenheizung korrelieren. Numerische Simulationen, basierend auf einem kinetischen Einteilchenbild, zeigen einen Transfer von magnetischer Energie zu kinetischer Energie der Ionen, der konsistent mit dem experimentell beobachteten Anstieg der Ionentemperatur ist.
In this work the mechanisms leading to the generation of the various reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) in a cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) jet and means to control their composition were studied. The investigated CAP jet kinpen is typically operated with Ar feed gas (pure or with molecular admixtures), driven at a frequency of approximately 1 MHz and features fast ionization waves or guided streamers, traveling at velocities of several km/s. The complex reaction networks were investigated by numerical and experimental techniques. Detailed experimental, analytical and computational investigations on the mass and heat transport in the plasma plume were performed: A novel analytical approach to diffusion in jet flows, the non-dispersive path mapping approximation (NDPM) was developed. The method for the first time allows for an estimation of the ambient species density in the near-field of jets that feature a non-homogeneous flow-field. The NDPM approximation was employed for the evaluation of laser induced fluorescence measurements on OH. Through combining measurements and NDPM approximation, this approach yielded an estimation for the ambient species density at the position of the guided streamers, not only in the laminar, but also in the (standard) turbulent operating regime. Accurate measurements of the temporally averaged ambient species density and temperature in the plasma plume were obtained by quantitative Schlieren measurements. The method yields temperature values with sub-Kelvin accuracy and, through combination with computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations, allowed for an estimation of the calorimetric power of the jet. In order to obtain a defined environment for the jet to operate in, a shielding gas device was designed in this work, which creates a gas curtain of defined composition around the plasma plume. The plasma dynamics on the ns timescale was investigated by phase resolved optical measurements. The effect of different shielding compositions ranging from pure N2 to pure O2 on guided streamer propagation was investigated. An electrostatic focusing mechanisms was discovered, which promotes the propagation of guided streamers along the channels formed by a noble gas in the plume of plasma jets operating in electronegative gases (such as air or O2). Two zero-dimensional (volume averaged) models were developed: First, the local processes in the guided streamer were modeled using an electron impact reaction kinetic model, which is closely correlated to densities of metastable argon (Ar*) obtained by laser atom absorption measurements. This first model shows that Ar* is the species which dominantly drives the plasma chemistry in the plasma plume. This is exploited in the second plug-flow reaction kinetics model, which is employed to investigate the formation of long-living RONS and uses an Ar* source term as sole energy input. The model uses the previous experimental data on mass and heat transport and temporal dynamics as input and is in turn verified by quantitative FTIR absorption measurements on O3, NO2, N2O, HNO3 and N2O5 in the far-field of the jet, where large absorption lengths can be achieved using a multi pass cell. For the evaluation of the zero-dimensional model, the time-of-flight of RONS from their generation to reaching the multi pass cell was determined using CFD simulations. The insight gained through this combined experimental-modeling approach on the reaction networks revealed relevant control parameters and enabled adjusting the plasma chemistry towards a desired RONS output. Through choosing appropriate feed-gas admixtures and shielding gas compositions, it is possible to generate an NOx-dominated plasma chemistry, although the jet usually produces a strongly O/O3-dominated chemistry. Understanding and controlling the plasma chemistry of cold atmospheric plasma sources for medical applications is not only essential for research, but is also the key for designing future plasma sources for specific medical applications that yield an optimum efficacy and avoid potential side effects of plasma treatment.
The goal of this thesis was to characterize the properties of tetramyristoyl cardiolipin (TMCL) and several environmental influences on it. This included investigating the pH and temperature dependency of TMCL as well as the influences of ROS on TMCL and exam-ining the lipid-protein interactions between TMCL and cytc. Furthermore, I extended the research to the analysis of binary mixtures composed of TMCL and dimyristoyl phosphati-dylcholine (DMPC). To this end, I investigated the samples with the aid of the Langmuir monolayer technique. This method allowed me to mimic interactions occurring at the membrane surface as it represents one membrane layer. The recording of π-A isotherms was also coupled with further other techniques like Brewster angle microscopy (BAM), Infrared Reflection-Absorption Spectroscopy (IRRAS), Grazing Incidence X-Ray Diffraction (GIXD) and Total Reflection X-Ray Fluorescence (TRXF) to enable a more comprehensive monolayer study. In addition, some systems were analyzed using Thin-layer Chromatography (TLC) and/or Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) to be able to draw conclusions about sample composition or characteristic temperatures, respectively.
This thesis describes investigations of metal clusters stored in an ion-cyclotron resonance (ICR) trap, as well as corresponding trap research and development. Charged clusters are produced and investigated in the experimental setup Cluster-Trap, comprising a cluster-ion source, an ICR trap and a time-of-flight (ToF) mass spectrometer. In the framework of its move to the new building of the Institute of Physics, new components have been added to the ClusterTrap setup. A radio-frequency ion trap is now used for cluster ion preparation prior to the performance of cluster experiments in the ICR trap. A quadrupole ion deflector allows an optimized usage of the ICR trap, as well as simultaneous use of several ion sources and detectors. The implementation of a potential lift at the ToF mass spectrometer enables a more flexible operation of the setup with ion energies up to several hundreds of electron volts. The new components have been tested and characterized, and the experimental procedures have been adapted. An important aspect of cluster investigations is the manipulation of trapped ions by application of appropriate excitation fields. For the ICR trap, a vector representation model has been developed for quick analysis of radial excitation fields, applied to the quarter-segmented ring electrode of an ICR trap. Its application has been demonstrated for asymmetric radial quadrupolar excitation of stored cluster ions, confirming the observation of unintended ion ejection from the trap. Investigation of multiply negatively charged metal clusters at ClusterTrap has been continued. By the "electron-bath" technique, i.e. simultaneous storage of cluster mono-anions and electrons in the ICR trap, high charge states are produced up to a limit which arises from restrictions for ion trapping. A modification of the electron bath, which bypasses this limit, has been introduced and demonstrated by the first-time production and detection of aluminum cluster anions carrying five excess electrons (penta-anions). Results of the penta-anion production as a function of the trapping voltage relate to the Coulomb potentials of the cluster anions involved, in agreement with previous findings. The observed poly-anionic clusters are meta-stable and their abundance as a function of the cluster size is determined by their lifetimes. Observed poly-anion abundances are described by a thermionic-emission approach, by means of the Richardson-Dushman formula. The height of the Coulomb potential in the formula is decreased to match experimental data, thus accounting for electron tunneling. Poly-anions are observed only above a minimum cluster size, the appearance size. To determine this limit from experimental results, a new data evaluation method has been introduced, which considers the poly-anion lifetimes and respective abundances of a range of cluster sizes. As a result, the experimental appearance size is larger than the smallest poly-anionic cluster observed, in contrast to previous approaches.
Interplay of reactive oxygen species with the mechanical properties of cells and mitochondria
(2023)
Cell mechanical properties are a popular label-free method for understanding basic cellular processes. In this thesis, I used Real-time deformability cytometry (RT-DC), a high-throughput microfluidic technology, to investigate the mechanical properties of cells and mitochondria under various conditions such as increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels and the application of different ligand coated gold nano-particles (Au-Nps) effect on cells. Initially, we showed the possibility to measure organelles, cells, and tissue-like structures (spheroids) in a single system by constructing a virtual fluidic channel. We investigated a potential application using cytochalasin D (cyto D) treatment, which revealed increased deformation and decreased stiffness in both the normal and virtual channels. Using mechanics as a marker, I investigated the effect of excessive ROS on the mechanical properties of human myeloid precursor cells (HL60). My findings suggest that the mechanical response of HL60 cells to increased ROS levels is mediated by re-localization of microtubules toward the cell center and F-actin to the cell periphery. Interestingly, I also observed intracellular acidification, which is a largely unexplored mechanism that may have contributed to our findings. I then extended our ROS and mechanics assay to investigate cell-AuNP interactions, demonstrating that cell properties vary depending on the cell culture media and ligand coating. The results showed that dextran coated gold nano-particels (Au-Nps) had low cytotoxicity, lower ROS release, and no change in cell mechanics, indicating a potential application for dextran Au NPs. Finally, I expanded our assays to include high-throughput microfluidic characterization of isolated mitochondria. Using both exogenously and endogenously induced ROS, we found an increase in mitochondrial deformation and a decrease in their size, which could have implications on mitochondrial function, i.e., fission and fusion. We believe that advanced applications of RT-DC technology will improve the comparability of results across different sample sizes while also promoting it as a disease detection technique.
This thesis presents the results of experimental investigations of the vertical and lateral properties of polyelectrolyte multilayer films (PEMs) adsorbed on a solid support. PEMs are a new class of organic thin films based on self-assembly layer-by-layer (LbL) processes of oppositely charged polyelectrolytes (charged polymers). The LbL assembly technique allows precise control of film thickness within a few nanometers and makes PEM systems especially interesting for technical applications. Thin films are prepared by alternating exposure of a hydrophilic substrate to solutions of oppositely charged polyelectrolytes. In this work, synthetic polycation poly (allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH) and polyanion poly (styrene sulfonate) (PSS) have been used. Range and amplitude of the electrostatic force during PEM build-up, has been shielded by use of high salt concentration in the deposition solution. As a foundation of any theory, role of non-elecrostatic (secondary) forces is explored. Four complementary methods have been combined to investigate the properties and composition of PEMs. X-ray reflectivity is sensitive to electron density gradients, and therefore provides information about film thickness, average electron density and interfacial roughness between materials of different electron densities (like PEM and air). Neutrons are the unique probe that is sensitive to the internal order of the multilayers (scattering length density variation) due to selective deuteration of the layers (PSS replaced by PSS_d). Therefore neutron reflectivity at V6 beamline, at the research reactor BER II, Helmholtz Centre for Materials and Energy (former Hahn-Meitner-Institute), was used in this work. Ultraviolet-visible (UV-Vis) light induces the characteristic absorption peak of polyelectrolytes and metallic nanoparticles, therefore with UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy is possible to probe the aggregation of metallic nanoparticles embedded into PEM by measuring their absorption spectra (imaginary part of the refraction index). Atomic force microscopy (AFM) allows to observe lateral structures at nano-level and to obtain surface topology of the films. Application of only small forces (pN) is achieved by use of a intermittent contact (tapping) mode in air. Summarizing the main results, the unambiguous parametrization of the investigated system for neutron reflectivity measurements enables to obtain detailed information about internal interfaces. New approach for polyelectrolyte multilayer architectures consisting of thick protonated and deuterated blocks can be used in order to distinguish different zones of the thin film growth which can be described as precursor and core zones. Thus, almost no bound water is found in precursor layers at 0% relative humidity, which suggests that water is mobile and the precursor layer is not in the glassy state like in the central zone of the PEM. Swelling behaviour of the PEMs (reversibility of the swelling) can be understood in terms of equilibrium reactions. Explored influence of temperature and type of salt used during preparation contributes to a better understanding of the formation of PEMs. The dependence of the film thickness on preparation temperature, concentration and the type of salt can be described by the hydrophobic nature of the effect. Experimental observations demonstrate that it is possible to decrease both the range and the amplitude of the electrostatic force by using an ion concentration of at least 0.1 mol/L in the solution. The role of secondary interactions such as hydrophobic attraction of the chains that can overcome electrostatic repulsion and become the major contributing factor for the layer formation and resulting structures is emphasized.
Turbulenz ist allgegenwärtig in der Natur. Ein wichtiges Charakteristikum sind Fluktuationen auf einer Vielzahl von räumlichen und zeitlichen Skalen, die sowohl in neutralen Fluiden und gasförmigen Systemen, als auch in Plasmen beobachtet werden. Obwohl der elektromagnetische Charakter von Plasmen eine erhöhte Komplexität von Plasmaturbulenz bedingt, sind die grundlegenden Eigenschaften universell. In magnetisch eingeschlossenen Plasmen führen fluktuierende Plasmaparameter zu turbulentem Transport von Plasmateilchen und Energie, der die Einschlusszeit verringert und wichtige Aspekte zukünftiger Fusionskraftwerke beeinflusst. Der intermittente Charakter dieses konvektiven Teilchenflusses ist verbunden mit turbulenten Strukturen mit großen Amplituden, auch "blobs" genannt, die radial durch das Magnetfeld propagieren. Intermittente Fluktuationen im Randplasma von Experimenten mit linearer Magnetfeldgeometrie werden ebenfalls propagierenden turbulenten Strukturen zugeschrieben. Dabei ist der Mechanismus der radialen Propagation kaum verstanden. In dieser Arbeit wird die Bildung und Propagation von turbulenten Strukturen im linear magnetisierten Helikonexperiment Vineta untersucht. Durch Messungen der Fluktuationen in der azimuthalen Ebene mit multi-dimensionalen Sonden wird gezeigt, dass turbulente Strukturen in Driftwellenturbulenz im Gebiet des maximalen Dichtegradienten entstehen. Die turbulenten Strukturen propagieren hauptsächlich azimuthal in Richtung der Hintergrund ExB-Drift, aber sie besitzen auch eine starke radiale Geschwindigkeitskomponente. Die radiale Propagation wird durch das selbstkonsistente Potential der turbulenten Struktur verursacht, dass zu einem fluktuations-induzierten radialen Transport führt. Im Plasmarand werden die turbulenten Strukturen als intermittente Dichteeruptionen mit großen Amplituden beobachtet. Ein Vergleich der experimentellen Ergebnisse mit numerischen dreidimensionalen Fluid-Simulationen mit abgestimmten Geometrie- und Randbedingungen zeigt Übereinstimmung. Die Bildung der turbulenten Strukturen ist kausal mit einer quasi-kohärenten Driftmode verbunden und ihre radiale Propagation wird durch das selbstkonsistente elektrische Feld verursacht, dass aus der dreidimensionalen Dynamik resultiert. Zum Vergleich wird die Propagation von turbulenten Strukturen im Randplasma vom National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) untersucht und mit theoretischen Propagationsmodellen verglichen.
Organic molecules are the carbon-based complex of several atoms, is an innovative and essential element to create nano-structural platforms, as a building block in the
field of organic electronics and organic spintronics. Because of its variety and functionality via widely studied synthetic methods, molecules have played an important role in electronics as not only a transport channel in bulk form but also a tuning layer
at the interface of hetero structures. The potential of molecular layers has also stood out in spintronics, owing to its mass-low composition producing long spin life time.
Organic materials can be employed in spintronics applications, benefiting from their low cost, ease of processing, and chemical tunability. Beyond this advantage, the configuration
of molecules on a metal film displays unique phenomena as it can control the molecular spins and interfacial coupling between them, resulting in the emergence
of molecular spinterface.
This thesis work focuses on identifying the interfacial properties between the ferromagnet and the Phenalenyl (PLY) based metal complexes. The growth morphology study of the copper-phenalenyl Cu-PLY based molecules influence the electronic coupling between the molecular layer and the ferromagnet. Zinc- Phenalenyl (ZMP) molecule already have been studied [1] by demonstrate the formation of a spinterface,
resulting interface magneto resistance (IMR) close to room temperature. The
spinterface formation leads to the unique property, that a magnetic tunnel junction
with a ZMP barrier requires only one ferromagnetic metal layer, while the other ferromagnetic layer is formed in the organic barrier directly at the ferromagnet/organic
barrier interface. Here we compare Phenaleny, Copper-Phenaleny Cu-PLY and Zincmethyl- phenaleny molecule based MTJ electrical and magnetic properties which will
be suitable for tunnel barrier and can be used for stable memory devices. We tune the magnetic property of ferromagnet and forma hybrid interface without any oxide layers in between the ferromagnet and molecular layers. The tuning of magnetic properties
via the molecular approach will certainly extend versatile functionalities of organic spinterfaces.
This work examines the influence of monovalent and divalent cations on tetramyristoyl cardiolipin (TMCL) monolayers. A lipid monolayer can undergo an ordering transition of the lipid alkyl chains from a disordered fluid phase (liquid-expanded (LE)) to an ordered gel phase (liquid-condensed (LC)). Compression of the lipid monolayer in a Pockels-Langmuir trough was monitored with a Wilhelmy plate tensiometer, yielding the surface pressure π in dependence of the area a molecule can occupy on average A, as a π-A-isotherm. The onset of the first order LE/LC phase transition is marked by an abrupt change in the isotherm at surface pressure πc.
These associated lipid membrane changes were characterized by variation of the compression speed, kind and concentration of the monovalent and divalent salt, pH, and temperature. The CL monolayer phase transition was found to depend on the compression speed, yielding only a small variation in the compression isotherms.
For monovalent cations on the cardiolipin monolayer, the dependence on salt concentration of the lipid liquid gel phase transition surface pressure πc was determined and a non-monotonic behavior was found, with a maximum in πc for a salt concentration of 0.1 mol/l. The maximum in πc can be shifted with pH (e.g. pH = 4.2). This behavior extended to potassium, sodium and cesium cations in the subphase. No ion specific effects were observed, which pointed to the prevalence of electrostatic interactions in the system.
Different divalent salt subphases, of either magnesium, calcium, strontium, manganese, iron or zinc salts, with fixed sodium chloride concentration of 0.15 mol/l at pH of 5.8 and 25 °C were investigated. πc decreases upon addition of divalent salts to the subphase. This points to increased screening and binding effects. Strongest binding effects were observed for calcium and manganese cations.
The electrostatic interactions of the system were modeled with a mean-field theory: Grahame’s equation, and a simple law of mass action. CL is modeled at half its molecular area and half its charge, with a proton dissociation constant of the phosphate group Ka,intrinsic(PO4) = 0.1 mol/l. The agreement with the experiment was satisfactory.
A linear dependence of πc on the temperature was found for cardiolipin monolayers on all subphases. The isothermal area compressibility modulus KA is calculated from selected isotherms. It was found that the flexibility of the monolayer decreases with temperature and the area per molecule for the cardiolipin fluid phase.
The compression speed, monovalent salt concentration, pH, and selected divalent cations were investigated with the BAM. For all a sigmoidal growth of xgel with compression was observed. For high salt concentrations non-circular and dendritic domains were observed.
A simple model for the nucleation process was introduced, yielding an estimate of 20 nm for the critical domain radius, which is below the resolution of the BAM, but a common length scale in biological systems.
This thesis discusses three publications in the field of dusty plasmas.
In the first section, measurements of the ir absorption of silica nanoparticles confined in an argon radiofrequency plasma discharge using a Fourier transform infrared spectrometer have been performed. By varying the gas pressure of the discharge and duty cycle of the applied radiofrequency voltage, a shift of the absorption peak of silica is observed. This shift is attributed to charge-dependent absorption features of silica. The charge-dependent shift has been calculated for silica particles, and from comparisons with the experiment the particle charge has been retrieved using the infrared phonon resonance shift method. With the two different approaches of changing the gas pressure and altering the duty cycle, one is able to deduce a relative change of the particle charge with pressure variations and an absolute estimate of the charge with the duty cycle.
In the second part, infrared (IR) absorption spectra of melamine-formaldehyde (MF) microparticles confined in an rf plasma are studied at different plasma conditions. Several absorption peaks have been analysed in dependence of plasma power and their temporal evolution. For comparison, the IR absorption spectra of heated MF microparticles without plasma exposition are used to determine the general influence of the temperature on the IR spectra. Measuring the temperature of the particles inside the plasma shows that the temperature is not the only process changing the particles' IR spectra. Chemical changes of the MF particles with increasing plasma power influence the absorption peak structure.
Finally, experiments on dust clusters trapped in the sheath of a radio frequency discharge have been performed for different magnetic field strengths ranging from a few milliteslas to 5.8 T. The dynamics of the dust clusters are analyzed in terms of their normal modes. From that, various dust properties such as the kinetic temperature, the dust charge, and the screening length are derived. It is found that the kinetic temperature of the cluster rises with the magnetic field, whereas the dust charge nearly remains constant. The screening length increases slightly at intermediate magnetic field strengths. Generally, the dust properties seem to correlate with magnetization parameters of the plasma electrons and ions, however only to a small degree.
Particle and heat transport in fusion devices often exceed the neoclassical prediction. This anomalous transport is thought to be produced by turbulence caused by microinstabilities such as ion and electron-temperature-gradient (ITG/ETG) and trapped-electron-mode (TEM) instabilities, the latter ones known for being strongly influenced by collisions. Additionally, in stellarators, the neoclassical transport can be important in the core, and therefore investigation of the effects of collisions is an important field of study. Prior to this thesis, however, no gyrokinetic simulations retaining collisions had been performed in stellarator geometry. In this work, collisional effects were added to EUTERPE, a previously collisionless gyrokinetic code which utilizes the δ f method. To simulate the collisions, a pitch-angle scattering operator was employed, and its implementation was carried out following the methods proposed in [Takizuka & Abe 1977, Vernay Master's thesis 2008]. To test this implementation, the evolution of the distribution function in a homogeneous plasma was first simulated, where Legendre polynomials constitute eigenfunctions of the collision operator. Also, the solution of the Spitzer problem was reproduced for a cylinder and a tokamak. Both these tests showed that collisions were correctly implemented and that the code is suited for more complex simulations. As a next step, the code was used to calculate the neoclassical radial particle flux by neglecting any turbulent fluctuations in the distribution function and the electric field. Particle fluxes in the neoclassical analytical regimes were simulated for tokamak and stellarator (LHD) configurations. In addition to the comparison with analytical fluxes, a successful benchmark with the DKES code was presented for the tokamak case, which further validates the code for neoclassical simulations. In the final part of the work, the effects of collisions were investigated for slab and toroidal ITGs and TEMs in a tokamak configuration. The results show that collisions reduce the growth rate of slab ITGs in cylinder geometry, whereas they do not affect ITGs in a tokamak, which are mainly curvature-driven. However it is important to note that the pitch-angle scattering operator does not conserve momentum, which is most critical in the parallel direction. Therefore, the damping found in a cylinder could be the consequence of this missing feature and not a physical result [Dimits & Cohen 1994]. Nonetheless, the results are useful to determine whether the instability is mainly being driven by a slab or toroidal ITG mode. EUTERPE also has the feature of including kinetic electrons, which made simulations of TEMs with collisions possible. The combination of collisions and kinetic electrons made the numerical calculations extremely time-consuming, since the time step had to be small enough to resolve the fast electron motion. In contrast to the ITG results, it was observed that collisions are extremely important for TEMs in a tokamak, and in some special cases, depending on whether they were mainly driven by density or temperature gradients, collisions could even suppress the mode (in agreement with [Angioni et al. 2005, Connor et al. 2006]). In the case of stellarators it was found that ITGs are highly dependent on the device configuration. For LHD it was shown that collisions slightly reduce the growth rate of the instability, but for Wendelstein 7-X they do not affect it and the growth rate showed a similar trend with collisionality to that of the tokamak case. Collisions also tend to make the ballooning structure of the modes less pronounced.
An experimental investigation of particle parallel flows has been carried out at Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X), one of the most advanced stellarators in the world. The studies are restricted to the outermost plasma region, the scrape-off layer (SOL), which is shaped to tackle the exhaust problem in vision of future fusion reactors based on plasma magnetic confinement. The aim of the measurements is to set the basis for a physics analysis of the SOL dynamics by obtaining direct information on convective heat transport, together with the assessment of the predominant flow directions of the main plasma ions and of fusion-products or wall-released impurities. In this way, a better comprehension of the interplay between the transport parallel and perpendicular to the SOL field lines can be achieved, contributing to the understanding of the effectiveness of the island divertor configuration.
The chosen instrument for the experimental studies is the Coherence Imaging Spectroscopy (CIS) diagnostic, a camera-based interferometer capable of measuring 2D Doppler particle flows associated with a selected visible line from the plasma. The diagnostic is distinguished by its high time resolution and spatial coverage, allowing the visualisation and measurements of flow velocities for a full module of W7-X simultaneously. A CIS diagnostic has been fully designed for W7-X with an improved level of accuracy achieved thanks to the implementation of a new calibration source, a continuous-wave-emission tunable laser. The laser allowed a full characterization of the diagnostic and a frequent precise calibration, making the CIS system reliable for parallel flow investigations during the operational campaign OP1.2. The validity and importance of the CIS measurements have been further confirmed with dedicated simulation of the SOL plasma parameters by the EMC3-EIRENE code, and by comparisons with other edge diagnostics. The CIS results show the effects related to dynamical changes in the SOL due to impurity gas puffs or the development of a plasma current. Moreover, CIS can be used as a powerful tool to test the limits of the current theoretical models, for example in the case of forward and reversed field experiments.
In der Arbeit werden hydrodynamische Modelle und numerische Verfahren zur theoretischen Beschreibung von anisothermen Plasmen untersucht und zur Analyse von Argonentladungen eingesetzt. Es wird ein neues Vier-Momenten-Modell sowie ein neues Drift-Diffusionsmodell zur Beschreibung der Elektronen hergeleitet. Die Beschreibung der Schwerteilchen erfolgt auf Basis eines Zwei-Momenten-Modells bzw. eines Drift-Diffusionsmodells. Zur selbstkonsistenten Bestimmung des elektrischen Feldes wird die Poisson-Gleichung gelöst. Es wird gezeigt, dass die neu entwickelten Fluid-Modelle eingesetzt werden können, um nichtlokale Transporteffekte der Elektronen zu studieren. Zur Diskretisierung der Mehr-Momenten-Modelle werden neue FCT-Verfahren auf Basis der Finiter-Differenzen- und der Finite-Elemente-Methode hergeleitet. Die Diskretisierung der Drift-Diffusionsmodelle erfolgt mittels einer modifizierten Scharfetter-Gummel-Methode. Zur Unterstützung experimenteller Untersuchungen werden neben einer Niederdruckglimmentladung, einer RF-Entladung bei Niederdruck und einer gepulsten Atmosphärendruckentladung auch eine dielektrisch behinderte Entladung bei Atmosphärendruck analysiert. Es wird gezeigt, dass die experimentell beobachteten Schichtstrukturen auf die lange Lebensdauer metastabiler Argonatome zurückzuführen sind.
In dieser Arbeit wird ein einfaches Verfahren zur Herstellung ultradünner (3 nm) Galliumschichten unter Umgebungsbedingungen beschrieben. Die Schichten sind stabil bis zu einem Auflage-Druck im GPa-Bereich und replizieren die zugrundeliegende Substratrauheit sowie größere Strukturen. Weiterhin wird ihre Eignung als Permeationsbarriere gezeigt. Mithilfe von optischen und elektrischen Messungen wird schließlich anhand des Drude-Modells die Alterung (Oxidation) der Schichten unter Umgebungsbedingungen beschrieben.
The collisionless tearing mode is investigated by means of the delta-f PIC code EUTERPE solving the gyrokinetic equation. In this thesis the first simulations of electromagnetic non-ideal MHD modes in a slab geometry with EUTERPE are presented. Linear simulations are carried out in the cases of vanishing and finite temperature gradients. Both cases are benchmarked using a shooting method showing that EUTERPE simulates the linearly unstable tearing mode to a very high accuracy. In the case of finite diamagnetic effects and values of the linear stability parameter Delta of order unity analytic predictions of the linear dispersion relation are compared with simulation results. The comparison validates the analytic results in this parameter range. Nonlinear single-mode simulations are performed in the small- to medium-Delta range measuring the dependency of the saturated island half width on the equilibrium current width. The results are compared with an analytic prediction obtained with a kinetic electromagnetic model. In this thesis the first simulation results in the regime of fast nonlinear reconnection~(medium- to high-Delta range) are presented using the standard gyrokinetic equation. In this regime a nonlinear critical threshold has been found dividing the saturated mode from the super-exponential phase for medium-Delta values. This critical threshold has been proven to occur in two slab equilibria frequently used for reconnection scenarios. Either changing the width of the equilibrium current or the wave number of the most unstable mode makes the threshold apparent. Extensive parameter studies including the variation of the domain extensions as well as the equilibrium current width are dedicated to a comprehensive overview of the critical threshold in a wide range of parameters. Additionally, a second critical threshold for high-Delta equilibria has been observed. A detailed comparison between a compressible gyrofluid code and EUTERPE is carried out. The two models are compared with each other in the linear regime by measuring growth rates over wave numbers of the most unstable mode for two setups of parameters. Analytical scaling predictions of the dispersion relation relevant to the low-Delta regime are discussed. Employing nonlinear simulations of both codes the saturated island half width and oscillation frequency of the magnetic islands are compared in the small-Delta range. Both models agree very well in the limit of marginal instability and differ slightly with decreasing wave vector. Recently, the full polarisation response in the quasi-neutrality equation was implemented in EUTERPE using the Padé approximation of the full gyrokinetic polarisation term. Linear simulation results including finite ratios of ion to electron temperature are benchmarked with the dispersion relation obtained from a hybrid model. Finite temperature effects influence the saturated island width slightly with increasing ion to electron temperature ratio which has been verified by both models.
This dissertation focusses on the numerical modelling of resonant destabilization of Alfvén eigenmodes by fast ions in fusion plasmas. It especially addresses non-linear simulations of stellarator plasmas in which particle collisions are retained. It is shown that collisions are required for a realistic description of Alfvén waves in plasmas relevant to nuclear fusion.
We start by carefully verifying the implementation of the collision operators into the electromagnetic version of the gyro-kinetic delta-f particle-in-cell code EUTERPE. After these initial benchmarks are completed successfully, the code is in a position to be applied to realistic tokamak and stellarator scenarios.
Since every collision operator needs to fulfil conservation laws, a momentum-conserving version of the pitch-angle scattering operator is implemented. This is in particular important for neoclassical transport simulations aimed at computing flux-surface variations of the electrostatic potential in stellarators.
Using the simplified CKA-EUTERPE model (employing a fixed-mode-structure approximation), we perform non-linear simulations in tokamaks and stellarators. We show that the non-linear dynamics of fast-ion-driven Alfvén eigenmodes is significantly influenced by collisions. They have the potential to enhance the saturation level and to affect the frequency chirping of the modes.
It is thus concluded that collisions play an essential role in determining Alfvén-eigenmode-induced fast-ion transport - an important issue for future fusion devices. In order to address this issue the CKA-EUTERPE model is extended to evolve multiple modes at the same time. First results of this multi-mode version (which enhances the level of realism of the simulations) are shown in the Appendix of the thesis.
The main objective of this work is to contribute to the understanding of the grafting of nitrogen and amino surface functional groups on polymers by means of plasmas containing nitrogen and hydrogen. For this purpose, many aspects of plasma surface modification were studied. In the frame of this work, a new, UHV-sealed plasma reactor system was put into operation. The system is special for its clean reaction environment and the possibility to perform quasi in situ XPS measurements. A comparison of the UHV system to a fine vacuum reactor showed that a clean reaction environment is mandatory for reproducible plasma processing and efficient nitrogen and amino functionalisation. A key motivation for the present work was the observation that the non-coating plasma processes reported in literature fail to graft primary amino groups on polymer surfaces with densities that significantly exceed 3 - 4% NH2/C. In order to investigate this phenomenon in detail, this work followed two experimental tracks: On the one hand, a broad systematic study of plasma processing parameters was performed. On the other, the surface diagnostics methods used for the quantification of amino groups were critically reviewed. For this, a numerical algorithm was developed to reconstruct the element depth profile from angle-resolved XPS data. In the scope of the process parameter study, cw and pulsed microwave (MW) plasma excitation was compared to radio-frequency (RF) excitation. The home-built MW source was studied and optimised with respect to ignition behaviour and power efficiency. The performance of the MW and RF plasmas in polymer surface modifications was studied in various gas mixtures containing NH3 and H,, or N2 and H,. Also the differences of glow and afterglow processing of polymers were investigated. Large variations of the nitrogen and primary amino grafting efficiencies were obtained. They triggered a number of new ideas for the underlying reaction mechanisms. Special attendance was devoted to the selectivity of the functionalisation processes for primary amino groups. Nitrogen-containing discharges that were rich in hydrogen achieved selectivities up to 100%. The upper limit of 3 - 4% amino groups on the surface, however, was not passed. Angle-resolved XPS measurements revealed a systematic problem for the definition of a surface density, which is capable of explaining the upper limit for amino groups. It is either due to a limited labelling depth of amino groups by the applied TFBA derivatisation reaction, or to a limited functionalisation depth of the plasma process. One very efficient nitrogen-grafting plasma process that was developed on polystyrene was applied to seven other unfluorinated polymers. The similarity of the resulting functionalisation demonstrated a good transfer-ability of plasma surface functionalisation processes. Plasma treatments of polymer surfaces, especially in hydrogen-containing gases, are known to be generally followed by uncontrollable oxidation phenomena. The properties of plasma-functionalised polymer surfaces were therefore studied in conjunction with ageing effects. Quasi in situ XPS analysis allowed to distinguish the influence of oxygen contamination during the plasma process from post-process oxidation due to contact of plasma-treated samples to atmospheric oxygen. The surface modification experiments were accompanied by several gas phase diagnostic techniques. In the scope of this work, the UHV reactor system was equipped with optical emission spectroscopy (OES), two-photon absorption laser-induced fluorescence (TALIF), and tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy (TDLAS). A separate plasma source was setup to perform an absolute quantification of the vacuum-ultra-violet (VUV) emission intensity of hydrogen-containing MW-excited plasmas. The techniques were evaluated with respect to their contribution to an understanding of the plasma processing of polymers. The rich experimental data allowed to suggest new reaction mechanisms for the grafting of nitrogen- and amino functional groups. Surface passivation experiments in H, plasmas of nitrogen-functionalised surfaces initiated a re-evaluation and an extension of the mechanism of selective etching [1]. Together with two other new reaction mechanisms, a hypothetical reaction scheme was suggested. It was studied by the help of two numerical models for heterogenous reactions of radicals with the surface. In order to avoid the complexity of the fragmentation process of NH,, the models were restricted to discharges in N, and H9. Despite the sparse information on the composition of the gas phase, the data of two experimental series showed a very particular phenomenology that allowed a first test of the model. The test supports the newly-suggested reaction mechanisms. Especially the role of NH2 attachment to open reaction sites for the grafting of amino groups was emphasised. A more stringent test of the model is left to future experiments with extended gas phase diagnostic means.
Achieving commercial production of electricity by magnetic confinement fusion requires improvements in energy and particle confinement. In order to better understand and optimise confinement, numerical simulations of plasma phenomena are useful. One particularly challenging regime is that in which long wavelength MHD phenomena interact with kinetic phenomena. In such a regime, global electromagnetic gyrokinetic simulations are necessary. In this regime, computational requirements have been excessive for Eulerian methods, while Particle-in-Cell (PIC) methods have been particularly badly affected by the "cancellation problem", a numerical problem resulting from the structure of the electromagnetic gyrokinetic equations. A number of researchers have been working on mitigating this problem with some significant successes. Another alternative to mitigating the problem is to move to a hybrid system of fluid and gyrokinetic equations. At the expense of reducing the physical content of the numerical model, particularly electron kinetic physics, it is possible in this way to perform global electromagnetic PIC simulations retaining ion gyrokinetic effects but eliminating the cancellation problem. The focus of this work has been the implementation of two such hybrid models into the gyrokinetic code EUTERPE. The two models treat electrons and the entire bulk plasma respectively as a fluid. Both models are additionally capable of considering the self-consistent interaction of an energetic ion species, described gyrokinetically, with the perturbed fields. These two models have been successfully benchmarked in linear growth rate and frequency against other codes for a Toroidal Alfvén Eigenmode (TAE) case. The m=1 internal kink mode, which is particularly challenging in terms of the fully gyrokinetic cancellation problem, has also been successfully benchmarked using the hybrid models with the MHD eigenvalue code CKA. Non-linear simulations in this TAE case have been performed confirming the analytical prediction of a quadratic relationship between the linear growth rate of the TAE and the saturated amplitude of the TAE for a range of moderate values of the linear growth rate. At higher linear growth rate, a slower scaling of saturated amplitude with linear growth rate is observed. This analysis has been extended to include the non-linear wave-wave coupling between multiple TAE modes. It has been shown that wave-wave coupling results in a significant reduction in the saturated amplitude. It has been demonstrated that both plasma elongation and ion kinetic effects can exert a stabilising influence on the internal kink mode. A population of energetic particles can also exert a stabilising influence at low normalised pressure. At high normalised fast particle pressure the stabilised kink mode has been shown to give way to the m=1 EPM, which has been simulated both linearly and non-linearly (the "fishbone" mode). The first self-consistent simulations of global modes in the magnetic geometry of the optimised stellarator Wendelstein 7-X have been performed both linearly and non-linearly. Limitations have been encountered in performing simulations in 3D geometry. A hypothesis for the cause of these problems is outlined and ideas for mitigation are briefly described. In addition to the hybrid model simulations, some of the first utilisations of a new scheme for mitigating the cancellation problem in the fully gyrokinetic regime have been carried out in the framework of this thesis. This scheme, which was developed separately, is concisely described in this work. The new scheme has been benchmarked with existing gyrokinetic and hybrid results. The linear Wendelstein 7-X simulations and linear and single mode non-linear TAE simulations have been repeated with the new model. It is shown that bulk plasma kinetics can suppress the growth rate of global modes in Wendelstein 7-X. The results of fully gyrokinetic TAE simulations, the first to have been performed to our knowledge, are shown to be in close agreement with those results obtained using hybrid models. In the TAE case, the hybrid models are an order of magnitude less computationally demanding than the new gyrokinetic scheme, which is in turn at least an order of magnitude less computationally demanding than the previous gyrokinetic scheme.
Magnetic reconnection is a fundamental plasma process where a change in field line connectivity occurs in a current sheet at the boundary between regions of opposing magnetic fields. In this process, energy stored in the magnetic field is converted into kinetic and thermal energy, which provides a source of plasma heating and energetic particles. Magnetic reconnection plays a key role in many space and laboratory plasma phenomena, e.g. solar flares, Earth’s magnetopause dynamics and instabilities in tokamaks. A new linear device (VINETAII) has been designed for the study of the fundamental physical processes involved in magnetic reconnection. The plasma parameters are such that magnetic reconnection occurs in a collision-dominated regime. A plasma gun creates a localized current sheet, and magnetic reconnection is driven by modulating the plasma current and the magnetic field structure. The plasma current is shown to flow in response to a combination of an externally induced electric field and electrostatic fields in the plasma, and is highly affected by axial sheath boundary conditions. Further, the current is changed by an additional axial magnetic field (guide field), and the current sheet geometry was demonstrated to be set by a combination of magnetic mapping and cross-field plasma diffusion. With increasing distance from the plasma gun, magnetic mapping results in an increase of the current sheet length and a decrease of the width. The control parameter is the ratio of the guide field to the reconnection magnetic field strength. Cross-field plasma diffusion leads to a radial expansion of the current sheet at low guide fields. Plasma currents are also observed in the azimuthal plane and were found to originate from a combination of the field-aligned current component and the diamagnetic current generated by steep in-plane pressure gradients in combination with the guide field. The reconnection rate, defined via the inductive electric field, is shown to be directly linked to the time-derivative of the plasma current. The reconnection rate decreases with increasing ratio of the guide field to the reconnection magnetic field strength, which is attributed to the plasma current dependency on axial boundary conditions and the plasma gun discharge. The above outlined results offer insights into the complex interaction between magnetic fields, electric fields, and the localized current flows during reconnection.