Title: Charged Particle Motion in Electric and Magnetic Fields
1Charged Particle Motion in Electric and Magnetic
Fields
- Introduction to PlasmaPrinciples and
ApplicationsProf. Reuven Boxman - Electrical Discharge and Plasma Lab
- Tel Aviv University
2Why Study Particle Motion?
- Presence of free mobile charged particles
differentiates plasma from usual gas - Motion of charged particles gives plasma its
special characteristics - Conductivity
- Interaction with E-M waves
- Usefulness in Applications
- Light sources
- Plasma processing
- Etc.
3Hierarchy in Studying Charged Particle Motion
- Single particle motion in known, static fields
- This Lecture!
- Continuum Approach
- Fluid Model (collision dominated)
- Collective Motion
- Next Lecture!
- Motion in A.C. fields
- Interaction with E-M wave
- Last lecture today
- Influence of particle motion (i.e. current) and
density (i..e. charge) on E and H - Self-consistent solutions
- MHD, (EHD)
- Tomorrow
4Charged Particle Motion - Text
- J. Reece Roth
- Industrial Plasma Engineering
- Volume I Principles
- Chapter 3 (pp. 54-116)
- Institute of Physics Publishing
- Bristol and Philadelphia, 1995.
5Single Charged Particle Motion in Static Electric
and Magnetic Fields
y
E
Consider Static E only
x
6Motion in Static Electric Field
- Consider particle at rest, at origin, at t0
7Motion in Static Magnetic Field
- No Motion ? No Force
- Motion parallel to B
- (i.e. in z direction)
- No magnetic force no influence
8Motion in Static Magnetic Field contd
- Motion ? to B
- i.e. in x-y plane
- No Motion ? No Motion
- Solve bottom eq. for vx,
- sub into top eq
- Vice versa
9Motion in Static Magnetic Field contd
- Solution of last equation in form
n.b. speed vo constant
10Motion in Static Magnetic Field contd
n.b. rotation direction depends on sign of q
11MOTION IN COMBINED ELECTROSTATIC AND
MAGNETOSTATIC FIELDS
- E and B in same direction (e.g. y)
- If no initial motion in x or z directions
- B has no effect
- Acceleration in y direction per previous
electrostatic solution
12Motion in Combined Electrostatic and
Magnetostatic Fields-contd
- E and B in same direction (e.g. y) but with
initial motion in x or z direction - Independent solutions for y-direction and for x-z
plane - Acceleration by E in y-directions, identical to
previous solution - Circular motion in x-z plane, as in previous
magnetostatic case
- Superimpose spiral motion in y direction, with
increasing pitch
13Motion in Crossed Electrostatic and Magnetostatic
Fields
Solve 1st eq for vy, sub into 2nd
14Motion in Crossed Electrostatic and Magnetostatic
Fields, contd
15Motion in Crossed Electrostatic and Magnetostatic
Fields, contd
Initial Condition particle at rest at xy0
16Motion in Crossed Electrostatic and Magnetostatic
Fields, contd
17Motion in Crossed Electrostatic and Magnetostatic
Fields, contd
Example H ion in crossed field
18Motion in Crossed Electrostatic and Magnetostatic
Fields, contd
19Motion in Crossed Electrostatic and Magnetostatic
Fields, contd
20General Motion in Combined, Uniform, Static E, B
Fields
- Resolve E into two components, E?and E?? (with
respect to B direction). - In direction, no influence of B usual
electrostatic acceleration - In ? direction, crossed-field motion
- Drift velocity, independent of charge,
- Superimpose ? and components
21Crossed-Field Magnetic Insulation
- Consider vacuum diode
- Electron emitted from cathode
- If Em/qB2ltgap, no electron reaches anode
- Magnetically insulated
22Effect of Collisions on Crossed-Field Motion
- Charged particle collides at random with other
particles in volume - e.g. electrons with background gas
- Simple model for collision charged particle
looses all of its energy, starts from 0
23Collisions in Crossed-Field, contd
- Guiding Center Motion
- vxE/B
- Amplitude of y oscillations 2Em/qB22E/?cB
- Collisions occur randomly - Every collision,
advance in y direction half of amplitude on
average - vy?cE/(?cB)
- Collisions allow magnetically confined charged
particles to escape - Transverse B increases effective path length for
electrons from cathode to anode, can increase
ionization probability - Used in magnetron sputtering to lower pressure
24Summary
- Charged particles accelerated by electric field
- Circular motion in plane normal to magnetic field
- Crossed field complex motion, overall direction
in EXB direction - Collisions disrupt ordered motion, allow drift
across magnetic field lines