Unlike low pressure plasmas, atmospheric pressure plasmas can treat materials with adsorbed liquids such as organic solvents used as cleaning agents in preparation of material surfaces for plasma treatments. These solvents may interact with the plasmas to influence the treatment results. This paper
Analysis of atmospheric pressure plasma parameters during treatment of polyethylene terephthalate films
β Scribed by Thorsten Deichmann; Marian G. McCord; Mohamed A. Bourham; Thomas Gries
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 687 KB
- Volume
- 121
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The North Carolina atmospheric plasma system (NCAPS) was interfaced with electric diagnostics and computerβbased instrument control hardware and software to display plasma parameters in realβtime. The monitoring system is also interfaced with gas flow controllers and a Teflonβcoated thermocouple for continuous monitoring of the gas flow and the ambient temperature inside the plasma test cell. A simplified plasma model was developed and built in the interface system to solve for the plasma electron number density and display the results during device operation. Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) films were treated in the device using various gas combinations. The ambient gas temperature inside the test cell increases from 83 to close to 95Β°F (28.33β35Β°C) for most gases within 30 s, and further increases to about 105 (40.6Β°C) after 300 s of operation, indicating a nonthermal plasma condition inside the test cell. The interface solver shows that the electron number density decreases when PET films are immersed in the plasma, indicating recombination of etched species to the free electrons. Contact angle measurements showed that the wettability of PET surfaces increased after plasma exposure for all used gas combinations. Measurements of Young's modulus with dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) showed an increase of the modulus of PET after treatment with helium plasma, whereas the modulus slightly decreased after treatment with oxygen, tetrafluorocarbon and hexafluorocarbon gases. Β© 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci, 2011
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