Abstract

This paper describes experimental investigations focused on the glow discharge created by a plasma actuator and used to shock wave modification over a flat plate in a Mach 2 air flow. The model is equipped with a plasma actuator composed of two electrodes. A weakly ionized plasma is created above the plate by generating a glow discharge with a negative dc potential applied to the upstream electrode. ICCD images of the discharge without and with the Mach 2 flow show the influence of the flow field on the discharge morphology. In addition, ICCD images of the modified flow revealed that when the discharge is ignited, the shock wave angle increased with the applied voltage. Thermal measurements of the flat plate surface carried out with an IR camera showed that the spatial temperature distribution is not uniform along the plate and its maximum, near the leading edge, increases with the applied voltage. Previous results showed that surface heating is responsible for roughly 50% of the shock wave angle increase, meaning that purely plasma effects must also be considered to fully explain the flow modifications observed. The focus of this paper is the study of the properties of the glow discharge to better understand the interaction between the supersonic flow and the purely plasma effects which are responsible of flow field modifications, in particular ionization degree and thermal disequilibrium upstream the model.

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