Douglas Breden
University of Texas at Austin
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Featured researches published by Douglas Breden.
Plasma Sources Science and Technology | 2012
Douglas Breden; Kenji Miki; Laxminarayan L. Raja
A computational modeling study of streamer propagation in a cold, atmospheric-pressure, helium jet in ambient air is presented. A self-consistent, multi-species, multi-temperature plasma model with detailed finite-rate chemistry and photoionization effects is used to provide fundamental insights into the structure and dynamics of the streamers. A parametric study of the streamer properties as a function of important discharge geometric and operating conditions is performed. The fluid mechanical mixing layer between the helium jet core and the ambient air is instrumental in guiding the propagation direction of the streamer and gives the plasma jet a visibly collimated appearance. The key chemical reactions which drive the streamer propagation are electron-impact ionization of helium neutral and nitrogen molecules. Photoionization plays a role in enhancing the propagation speed of the streamer, but is not necessary to sustain the streamer. The streamer yields a large radical concentration through chemical reactions in the streamer head and the body. The streamer propagation speed increases with reduced helium jet radius and increased helium–air mixing layer width. Impurities in the helium jet result in a significant increase in the discharge propagation speed within the tube through photoionization, but not after the streamer propagates into the open ambient region. It is also observed that thinner electrodes produce stronger electric-field concentrations that increase discharge propagation speeds within the tube but have a smaller influence on the discharge after it emerges out of the tube as a streamer.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2013
Douglas Breden; Laxminarayan L. Raja; Cherian A. Idicheria; Paul M. Najt; Shankar Mahadevan
We present a computational simulation study of non-equilibrium streamer discharges in a coaxial electrode and a corona geometry for automotive combustion ignition applications. The streamers propagate in combustible fuel-air mixtures at high pressures representative of internal combustion engine conditions. The study was performed using a self-consistent, two-temperature plasma model with finite-rate plasma chemical kinetics. Positive high voltage pulses of order tens of kV and duration of tens of nanoseconds were applied to the powered inner cylindrical electrode which resulted in the formation and propagation of a cathode-directed streamer. The resulting spatial and temporal production of active radical species such as O, H, and singlet delta oxygen is quantified and compared for lean and stoichiometric fuel-air mixtures. For the coaxial electrode geometry, the discharge is characterized by a primary streamer that bridges the inter-electrode gap and a secondary streamer that develops in the wake of the ...
Plasma Sources Science and Technology | 2014
Douglas Breden; Laxminarayan L. Raja
We describe a computational modeling study of a cold atmospheric pressure plasma jet interacting with a dielectric surface placed normal to the jet axis. The plasma jet is generated by the application of a nanosecond pulse voltage applied to a dielectric tube through which the jet issues into ambient air. A base fluid flow field is pre-computed using a Navier–Stokes model for the helium jet impinging on the dielectric target surface with a two-species description for laminar diffusional mixing of the helium and ambient air streams. A self-consistent, multiple species, two-temperature model is used to describe the non-equilibrium plasma discharge dynamics in the presence of the base jet flow field. A single nanosecond pulse discharge event starting from initial breakdown in the dielectric tube, to propagation into the open gap, and finally the interaction with the dielectric surface is simulated. Initially, the plasma forms within the dielectric tube and propagates along the tube surface as a surface discharge driven by large induced electric fields produced by trapped charge on the dielectric surface. When the discharge reaches the end of the dielectric tube, the discharge transitions to a constricted fast ionization wave that propagates along the helium–air interface. The fast ionization wave eventually reaches the dielectric target surface where charged species are deposited as the discharge propagates parallel to the wall as a surface driven discharge. The surface driven discharge ceases to propagate once the quantity of air to helium is sufficient enough to quench the hot electrons and prevent further ionization. Due to the low speed of the flow discharge and the short life times of the radical species such as O, most of the radical species delivered to the surface are a result of the surface discharge that forms after the plasma bullet impinges against the surface. It is found that factors such as the thickness of the target dielectric and the profile of the stagnation helium–air jet significantly impact the net quantity of reactive particles delivered to the surface.
40th AIAA Plasmadynamics and Lasers Conference | 2009
Douglas Breden; Laxminarayan L. Raja
SAE Technical Paper Series | 2018
Riccardo Scarcelli; Anqi Zhang; Thomas Wallner; Douglas Breden; Anand Karpatne; Laxminarayan L. Raja; Isaac W. Ekoto; Benjamin Wolk
SAE Technical Paper Series | 2018
Anand Karpatne; Douglas Breden; Laxminarayan L. Raja
SAE Technical Paper Series | 2018
Douglas Breden; Anand Karpatne; Laxminarayan L. Raja
Journal of Physics D | 2018
Anqi Zhang; Riccardo Scarcelli; Thomas Wallner; Douglas Breden; Anand Karpatne; Laxminarayan L. Raja; Isaac W. Ekoto; Benjamin Wolk
WCX™ 17: SAE World Congress ExperienceSAE International | 2017
Anand Karpatne; Douglas Breden; Laxminarayan L. Raja
Archive | 2013
Laxminarayan L. Raja; Douglas Breden; Rochan Upadhyay; Shankar Mahadevan