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Dive into the research topics where Arthur Greb is active.

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Featured researches published by Arthur Greb.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Tailoring the nonlinear frequency coupling between odd harmonics for the optimisation of charged particle dynamics in capacitively coupled oxygen plasmas

Andrew Gibson; Arthur Greb; W. G. Graham; Timo Gans

The influence of nonlinear frequency coupling in an oxygen plasma excited by two odd harmonics at moderate pressure is investigated using a numerical model. Through variations in the voltage ratio and phase shift between the frequency components changes in ionization dynamics and sheath voltages are demonstrated. Furthermore, a regime in which the voltage drop across the plasma sheath is minimised is identified. This regime provides a significantly higher ion flux than a single frequency discharge driven by the lower of the two frequencies alone. These operating parameters have potential to be exploited for plasma processes requiring low ion bombardment energies but high ion fluxes.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Improved fluid simulations of radio-frequency plasmas using energy dependent ion mobilities

Arthur Greb; Kari Niemi; Deborah O'Connell; Gerard J. Ennis; Niall MacGearailt; Timo Gans

Symmetric and asymmetric capacitively coupled radio-frequency plasmas in oxygen at 40 Pa, 300 V voltage amplitude and a discharge gap of 40 mm are investigated by means of one-dimensional numerical semi-kinetic fluid modeling on the basis of a simplified reaction scheme including the dominant positive and negative ions, background gas, and electrons. An improved treatment, by accounting for the dependence of ion mobilities on E/N, is compared to the standard approach, based on using zero-field mobility values only. The charged particle dynamics as a result of direct electron impact ionization of oxygen, secondary electron release from the electrodes, the spatial distribution of all involved particles as well as impact of geometry and model modification on ion energies is analyzed and compared to independent simulations and experiments.


Plasma Sources Science and Technology | 2015

Influence of surface conditions on plasma dynamics and electron heating in a radio-frequency driven capacitively coupled oxygen plasma

Arthur Greb; Andrew Gibson; Kari Niemi; Deborah O’Connell; Timo Gans

The impact of changing surface condition on plasma dynamics and electron heating is investigated by means of numerical simulations, based on a semi-kinetic fluid model approach, and compared with measurements of the nanosecond electron dynamics in the plasma-surface interface region using phase resolved optical emission spectroscopy (PROES). The simulations are conducted in a one-dimensional domain and account for a geometrical asymmetry comparable to the experimental setup of a radio-frequency driven capacitively coupled plasma in a gaseous electronics conference reference cell. A simple reaction scheme is considered, including electrons, positive ions, negative ions and metastable singlet delta oxygen (SDO) as individual species. The role of surface loss and effective lifetime of SDO is discussed. To simulate different surface conditions, the SDO surface loss probability and the secondary electron emission coefficient were varied in the model. It is found that a change in surface condition significantly influences the metastable concentration, electronegativity, spatial particle distributions and densities as well as the ionization and electron heating dynamics. The excitation dynamics obtained from simulations are compared with PROES measurements. This allows to determine experimentally relevant SDO surface loss probabilities and secondary electron emission coefficient values in-situ and is demonstrated for two different surface materials, namely aluminum and Teflon.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

The influence of surface properties on the plasma dynamics in radio-frequency driven oxygen plasmas: Measurements and simulations

Arthur Greb; Kari Niemi; Deborah O'Connell; Timo Gans

Plasma parameters and dynamics in capacitively coupled oxygen plasmas are investigated for different surface conditions. Metastable species concentration, electronegativity, spatial distribution of particle densities as well as the ionization dynamics are significantly influenced by the surface loss probability of metastable singlet delta oxygen (SDO). Simulated surface conditions are compared to experiments in the plasma-surface interface region using phase resolved optical emission spectroscopy. It is demonstrated how in-situ measurements of excitation features can be used to determine SDO surface loss probabilities for different surface materials.


Plasma Sources Science and Technology | 2016

Capacitively coupled hydrogen plasmas sustained by tailored voltage waveforms: : excitation dynamics and ion flux asymmetry

Bastien Bruneau; Paola Diomede; Demetre J. Economou; S. Longo; Timo Gans; Deborah O’Connell; Arthur Greb; Erik V. Johnson; J P Booth

Parallel plate capacitively coupled plasmas in hydrogen at relatively high pressure (n1 Torr) are excited with tailored voltage waveforms containing up to five frequencies. Predictions of a hybrid model combining a particle-in-cell simulation with Monte Carlo collisions and a fluid model are compared to phase resolved optical emission spectroscopy measurements, yielding information on the dynamics of the excitation rate in these discharges. When the discharge is excited with amplitude asymmetric waveforms, the discharge becomes electrically asymmetric, with different ion energies at each of the two electrodes. Unexpectedly, large differences in the H2+ fluxes to each of the two electrodes are caused by the different H3+ energies. When the discharge is excited with slope asymmetric waveforms, only weak electrical asymmetry of the discharge is observed. In this case, electron power absorption due to fast sheath expansion at one electrode is balanced by electron power absorption at the opposite electrode due to a strong electric field reversal.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Energy resolved actinometry for simultaneous measurement of atomic oxygen densities and local mean electron energies in radio-frequency driven plasmas

Arthur Greb; Kari Niemi; Deborah O'Connell; Timo Gans

A diagnostic method for the simultaneous determination of atomic oxygen densities and mean electron energies is demonstrated for an atmospheric pressure radio-frequency plasma jet. The proposed method is based on phase resolved optical emission measurements of the direct and dissociative electron-impact excitation dynamics of three distinct emission lines, namely, Ar 750.4 nm, O 777.4 nm, and O 844.6 nm. The energy dependence of these lines serves as basis for analysis by taking into account two line ratios. In this frame, the method is highly adaptable with regard to pressure and gas composition. Results are benchmarked against independent numerical simulations and two-photon absorption laser-induced fluorescence experiments.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2016

Slope and amplitude asymmetry effects on low frequency capacitively coupled carbon tetrafluoride plasmas

Bastien Bruneau; Ihor Korolov; Trevor Lafleur; Timo Gans; Deborah O'Connell; Arthur Greb; Aranka Derzsi; Z. Donkó; Steven Brandt; Edmund Schüngel; Julian Schulze; Erik V. Johnson; J P Booth

We report investigations of capacitively coupled carbon tetrafluoride (CF4) plasmas excited with tailored voltage waveforms containing up to five harmonics of a base frequency of 5.5 MHz. The impact of both the slope asymmetry, and the amplitude asymmetry, of these waveforms on the discharge is examined by combining experiments with particle-in-cell simulations. For all conditions studied herein, the discharge is shown to operate in the drift-ambipolar mode, where a comparatively large electric field in the plasma bulk (outside the sheaths) is the main mechanism for electron power absorption leading to ionization. We show that both types of waveform asymmetries strongly influence the ion energy at the electrodes, with the particularity of having the highest ion flux on the electrode where the lowest ion energy is observed. Even at the comparatively high pressure (600 mTorr) and low fundamental frequency of 5.5 MHz used here, tailoring the voltage waveforms is shown to efficiently create an asymmetry of both the ion energy and the ion flux in geometrically symmetric reactors.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2017

Investigation of the radially resolved oxygen dissociation degree and local mean electron energy in oxygen plasmas in contact with different surface materials

Takayoshi Tsutsumi; Arthur Greb; Andrew Gibson; Masaru Hori; Deborah O'Connell; Timo Gans

Energy Resolved Actinometry is applied to simultaneously measure the radially resolved oxygen dissociation degree and local mean electron energy in a low-pressure capacitively coupled radio-frequency oxygen plasma with an argon tracer gas admixture. For this purpose, the excitation dynamics of three excited states, namely, Ar(2p1), O(3p3P), and O(3p5P), were determined from their optical emission at 750.46 nm, 777.4 nm, and 844.6 nm using Phase Resolved Optical Emission Spectroscopy (PROES). Both copper and silicon dioxide surfaces are studied with respect to their influence on the oxygen dissociation degree, local mean electron energy, and the radial distributions of both quantities and the variation of the two quantities with discharge pressure and driving voltage are detailed. The differences in the measured dissociation degree between different materials are related back to atomic oxygen surface recombination probabilities.


international conference on plasma science | 2012

Combination of modeling and simple real-time measurements to control plasma-surface interaction processes

Arthur Greb; Kari Niemi; Deborah O'Connell; Timo Gans; Gerard J. Ennis; Niall MacGearailt

Summary form only given. The increasing complexity in industrial plasma processing demands new strategies for process control and monitoring. The energy transport mechanisms in the interface region between non-thermal low-pressure plasma and surface are of particular importance. Measurements of the “in situ” surface condition, which strongly affects the plasma-surface interaction processes, are extremely challenging. The most promising approach for advanced process monitoring is the active coupling of semi-kinetic simulations and diagnostics.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Strong Ionization Asymmetry in a Geometrically Symmetric Radio Frequency Capacitively Coupled Plasma Induced by Sawtooth Voltage Waveforms

Bastien Bruneau; Timo Gans; Deborah O'Connell; Arthur Greb; Erik V. Johnson; J P Booth

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Aranka Derzsi

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Z. Donkó

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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