Toroidal plasmoid generation via extreme hydrodynamic shear

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Abstract

Saint Elmo’s fire and lightning are two known forms of naturally occurring atmospheric pressure plasmas. As a technology, nonthermal plasmas are induced from artificially created electromagnetic or electrostatic fields. Here we report the observation of arguably a unique case of a naturally formed such plasma, created in air at room temperature without external electromagnetic action, by impinging a high-speed microjet of deionized water on a dielectric solid surface. We demonstrate that tribo-electrification from extreme and focused hydrodynamic shear is the driving mechanism for the generation of energetic free electrons. Air ionization results in a plasma that, unlike the general family, is topologically well defined in the form of a coherent toroidal structure. Possibly confined through its self-induced electromagnetic field, this plasmoid is shown to emit strong luminescence and discrete-frequency radio waves. Our experimental study suggests the discovery of a unique platform to support experimentation in low-temperature plasma science.

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Gharib, M., Mendoza, S., Rosenfeld, M., Beizai, M., & Alves Pereira, F. J. (2017). Toroidal plasmoid generation via extreme hydrodynamic shear. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(48), 12657–12662. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1712717114

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