Abstract
The present study examined the formation of hot spots in the plasma column of a 3.5 kJ Mather-type plasma focus device. Experiments were performed with air and argon as operating gases at 0.2–1.5 mbar of pressures. X-ray source images were obtained using a pinhole camera with dental X-ray film as X-ray detector. The objective was to investigate the effect of the operating conditions and gas type on formation and characteristics of the hot spots. Results showed that when using air in comparison to argon, the total X-ray emission is increased and therefore, the hot spots are covered by this high intensity emission and would be observed less frequently in the image. Using metal filters to attenuate the low-energy X-rays revealed that the most energetic or the most intense radiation was emitted from the hot spots region. The images of the X-ray source obtained using argon at the middle pressures (0.4–0.6 mbar) showed both the plasma column and the photons emitted from the anode surface. A pressure of 0.8–1.5 mbar using argon was most likely to observe the hot spots. For argon gas, the 0.9 mbar was the pressure in which the hot spots were more frequently observed with high reproducibility of location and number. Measurements revealed that the typical size of a hot spot was 10–300 µm and the distance from the anode surface was 0.5–20 mm.
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