Over the last decade, dusty plasma research has sought to explore the physics of magnetized dusty plasmas. Due to the small charge-to-mass ratio of micron-sized dust grains, magnetic fields of B ≥ 1 T are needed to magnetize these particles. A peculiar phenomenon that occurs in capacitively coupled, glow discharge dusty plasmas at high magnetic fields that are perpendicular to the electrodes is the formation of stationary or mobile filamentary structures that are aligned along the magnetic field. In experiments, these filaments are found to form at a low neutral gas pressure, low applied radio frequency power, and a high magnetic field. This paper reports on new simulations of capacitively coupled plasmas at a high magnetic field for a configuration with a powered metal electrode and a grounded electrode with a dielectric barrier. It is shown that for this configuration, it is possible to form filamentary structures that appear in the electron density, potential, and light emission, which have properties that scale qualitatively with experiments. For these conditions, the dielectric strength of the boundary is most strongly correlated with the formation of the filaments. Implications of these observations and how they could be used to motivate future experiments are discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Menati, M., Thomas, E., & Kushner, M. J. (2019, June 1). Filamentation of capacitively coupled plasmas in large magnetic fields. Physics of Plasmas. American Institute of Physics Inc. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5092600
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