Plasma Sci. Technol.
  2019,Vol. 21(7): 74007-074007
  2018 National Conference on High Voltage and Discharge Plasmas
Influence of high-voltage pulse parameters on the propagation of a plasma synthetic jet
doi: 10.1088/2058-6272/ab00b0
Influence of high-voltage pulse parameters on the propagation of a plasma synthetic jet
Shuqun WU (吴淑群), Xueyuan LIU (刘雪原) , Guowang HUANG (黄国旺), Chang LIU (刘畅), Weijie BIAN (卞伟杰) and Chaohai ZHANG (张潮海)
Center for More Electric Aircraft Power System, College of Automation Engineering, Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Nanjing 210016, People’s Republic of China
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Abstract:

In this work, a typical pin-to-pin plasma synthetic jet in static air is excited by a pulsed DC power supply. The influences of the pulse rising time, the amplitude and the repetition frequency of the pulse voltage on the jet flow have been investigated. First, using a high-speed Schlieren imaging technique, the induced shock waves and the fast jet flow generated by the plasma synthetic jet are characterized. With a deposited energy of 44 mJ per pulse, the velocity of the shock wave and the maximum velocity of the jet flow reach 320 m s−1 and 100 m s−1, respectively. Second, when the applied voltage increases from 12.8 kV to 16 kV, the maximum jet velocity increases from 66 m s−1 to 93 m s−1. On the other hand, as the pulse rising time varies from 50 ns to 500 ns, or the pulse repetition frequency increases from 5 Hz to 40 Hz, the jet velocity induced by the plasma synthetic jet is weakly dependent. In addition, a comparative study of the plasma synthetic jets using three commercial pulsed power supplies (XJ-15, NPG- 18, and PG-30) is implemented. It reveals that the maximum jet velocity of 120 m s−1 is obtained in the case of PG-30, with the longest pulse rising time and the lowest breakdown voltage, while the maximum velocity of 33 m s−1 is detected in the case of NPG-18, even though it has the shortest pulse rising time and the highest breakdown voltage.

Key words: spark discharge,  plasma synthetic jet,  nanosecond pulsed power 
Received: 10 November 2018    
Fund:

This work was partially supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 51607090), the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province (No. BK20160796), Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No. XCA17003-03), and the Delta Research and Educational Foundation (No. DREG2017008).