Abstract

The effects of pressure and laser energy on the excitation temperature, electron number density and spark energy of laser induced plasmas (LIPs) in nitrogen were investigated using an ungated spectrometer with an electron multiplying charge-coupled device (EMCCD) camera as the detector. The plasmas were generated in nitrogen of 1.2×104Pa to 1.0×105Pa by 532nm output of a 10Hz Q-switched Nd:YAG laser with pulse energy ranging from 20mJ to 100mJ. The excitation temperatures were found around 3eV, and varied little with pressure and laser energy. The electron number densities increased from 5.8×1017cm−3 to 4.7×1018cm−3 when the pressure was increased from 1.2×104Pa to 1.0×105Pa, but varied little with laser energy. The spark energy increased linearly with the input laser energy, and saturated at 35–60% of the input energy. Comparisons with results of time-resolved measurements and of other authors indicate that the ungated spectrometer can give reasonable results on excitation temperature and electron number density of LIPs, although it suffers intrinsic limitations involved with its inability to be time-resolved, and can serve as an option to lower systematic cost for practical applications of laser induced plasmas.

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