Abstract

Using pseudospark discharge sourced electron beams for the generation of high-peak-power millimeter and terahertz radiation has attracted increasing research interest in recent years. However, one of the crucially important and hitherto unanswered questions is what is the upper-frequency limit at which millimeter-wave devices can be driven by pseudospark discharge sourced electron beams?. In this paper, we studied this question from the perspective of beam transportation in a plasma background, more specifically an ion channel using particle-in-cell simulations to find the limitations. The parameter ranges of the beam transportation with small oscillations in the beam diameter were investigated and summarized, through simulations of beam propagation in a large diameter drift tube with different ion densities, plasma electron densities, beam density distributions, and beam energies. The beam transportation in a small diameter beam tunnel was also simulated. It showed the maximum beam current with a small velocity spread that can be transported in the beam tunnel was determined by the diameter of the beam tunnel and the ion density. High injected current will cause significant beam loss and reduce the overall efficiency. The simulation results indicate a minimum diameter of the beam tunnel in a millimeter-wave circuit that can be effectively driven by a pseudospark-sourced electron beam. The equivalent upper limit in the operating frequency is about 400 GHz.

Highlights

  • Pseudospark (PS) discharges are low-pressure gas discharges in the range of 50 to 500 mTorr

  • A backward wave oscillator operating at TM01 mode with a cutoff frequency of 200 GHz has a mean radius of 0.57 mm [6]

  • The plasma background is created prior to the electron beam generated in the hollow-cathode discharge stage, which has a balanced performance of beam energy and current for beam-wave interaction

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Pseudospark (PS) discharges are low-pressure gas discharges in the range of 50 to 500 mTorr. The plasma background is created prior to the electron beam generated in the hollow-cathode discharge stage, which has a balanced performance of beam energy and current for beam-wave interaction. It shows the parameter region where a small ripple can be achieved, which is desired for the beam-wave interaction to generate millimeter-wave radiation. At the Gaussian distribution with a smaller beam size, the beam ripple is smaller when it is over-focused because the space-charge force is smaller at a larger radius

Impact of trapped plasma electrons
PS-sourced beam transportation in a small beam tunnel
Findings
Discussion and conclusion
Full Text
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