Electron presheaths: the outsized influence of positive boundaries on plasmas

2017 
Electron sheaths form near the surface of objects biased more positive than the plasma potential, such as a Langmuir probe collecting electron saturation current. Generally, the formation of electron sheaths requires that the electron-collecting area be sufficiently smaller ( times) than the ion-collecting area. They are commonly thought to be local phenomena that collect the random thermal electron current, but do not otherwise perturb a plasma. Here, using experiments on an electrode embedded in a wall in a helium discharge, particle-in-cell simulations, and theory it is shown that under low temperature plasma conditions () electron sheaths are far from local. Instead, a long presheath region (27 mm, approximately an electron's mean free path) extends into the plasma where electrons are accelerated via a pressure gradient to a flow speed exceeding the electron thermal speed at the sheath edge. This fast flow is found to excite instabilities, causing strong fluctuations near the sheath edge.
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