Development of Low-Temperature Atmospheric Plasma Jet Sources for Biological Applications

Authors

  • Sura A. Kadhim Department of Physics , College of Science, University of Baghdad, Bahgdad, Iraq
  • Hammad R. Humud Department of Physics , College of Science, University of Baghdad, Bahgdad, Iraq

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24996/ijs.2023.64.7.18

Keywords:

Plasma jet, Optical emission spectroscopy, Argon gas, Atmospheric pressure plasma

Abstract

     The research aims to develop and build a plasma jet system operating under atmospheric pressure.for biological purposes. The advanced plasma system consists of a power supply and a plasma torch. The source of the development of the system is a previous laboratory system that was developed by changing the voltage and frequency of the power supply, as the power provider equips the system with a voltage in the form of a sine wave whose value is fixed at about (7.5kV) peak to peak and its frequency is about (28 kHz). The plasma torch consists of a teflon tube with of width of (10 m ) located at (10mm)  from the end of the tube. The current waveform and voltage wave were measured using a current and voltage sensor and an oscilloscope. The plasma jet was characterized. Electron temperature and electron density vary with the gas flow rate; the length of the plasma jet depends on the flow rate of argon gas, and the best length of jetting plasma was (1.5 cm) at a flow rate of (2.5 l/min). The gas temperature was measured by an infrared thermometer at a constant flow rate  of (2.5 l/min) which is (18°C) after 15 minutes of irradiation. From these results, it was concluded that the developed plasma is suitable for biological applications.

Downloads

Published

2023-07-30

Issue

Section

Physics

How to Cite

Development of Low-Temperature Atmospheric Plasma Jet Sources for Biological Applications. (2023). Iraqi Journal of Science, 64(7), 3362-3372. https://doi.org/10.24996/ijs.2023.64.7.18

Similar Articles

1-10 of 693

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)