
| Abstract | Why use | Application | Industrial | Behavior | Structure | Factors | Diff
Configuration |
WHAT ARE PLASMA
Plasmas, the fourth state-of-matter, are collections
of freely moving charged particles(mainly electrons and ions) in
which collective phenomena, such as wave, dominate the behavior of
the system. Atoms have lost electrons, energy is needed to strip
electrons from atoms to make plasma. The energy can be of various
origins: thermal, electrical, or light (ultraviolet light or intense
visible light from a laser). Plasma are essential to many high-technology
applications, one example is fusion energy for which the fuel is
high-temperature plasma. Low-temperature plasma are used for a growing
number of materials fabrication processes including the etching of
complex patterns for micro-electronic and micro-optical components
and the deposition of tribological, magnetic, microwave generation,
destruction of toxic wastes, chemical synthesis, lasers, ion thrusters,
and advanced design accelerators for fundamental particle research. |
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PLASMA IN NATURE
Plasma is by far the most common form of matter. Plasma
in the stars and in the tenuous space between them makes up over
99% of the visible universe and perhaps most of that which is not
visible. On earth we live upon an island of "ordinary" matter.
The different states of matter generally found on earth are solid,
liquid, and gas. |
| We have learned to work, play, and rest
using these familiar states of matter. Sir William Crookes, an
English physicist, identified a fourth state of matter, now called
plasma, in 1879. Plasma temperature and densities range from relatively
cool and tenuous (aurora borealis) to very hot and dense (the central
core of a star). Ordinary solids, liquids, and gases are both electrically
neutral and too cool or dense to be in a plasma state. The word "PLASMA" first
applied to ionized gas by Dr. Irving Langmuir, an American chemist
and physicist, in 1929. |
Natural plasma examples include lightning,
fire, and aurora borealis
Cold plasma examples are: fluorescent light, high-intensity arc lamp
and some of street lights. |
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