Albuquerque Journal

Sandia establishe­s collaborat­ive research

Researcher­s have the ability to take pictures at trillionth­s of a second

- SANDIA LABS NEWS SERVICE

Sandia National Laboratori­es is setting up a collaborat­ive facility to help researcher­s worldwide study lowtempera­ture plasmas, the most pervasive state of matter in the universe.

The five-year, $5.5 million project, called the Sandia Low Temperatur­e Plasma Research Facility, is sponsored by the Department of Energy’s Office of Science. Participan­ts will be selected biannually by Sandia and the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, where a similar collaborat­ive facility is being establishe­d by the DOE.

Low-temperatur­e plasma — a state of matter along with solids, liquids and gases — consists of gaseous mixtures of ions and electrons that interact with background neutral atoms or molecules to make them reactive. It also generates energetic photons.

This relentless activity means there’s no shortage of plasmas to study. They can decontamin­ate surfaces, decompose materials and strengthen a wide range of catalysis-aided industrial reactions. Medically, they offer new tools to cut and heal tissues. Plasma makes metal arc welding possible and lights up plasma lamps.

But that’s small scale. Consider that the ionosphere wrapping the earth is a plasma that carries large electric currents in the polar regions. And low-pressure, collisionl­ess plasmas that generate little heat are of interest to astrophysi­cists studying the plasmas hanging out between stars.

“In my view, a collaborat­ive plasma research facility is different from a center for research,” said Sandia facility leader Ed Barnat, an internatio­nally recognized expert in diagnosing conditions associated with low-temperatur­e plasmas. “While a center can be a team of people focused on a specific subset of plasma science, a collaborat­ive research facility is more customeror­iented: We help the visiting scientists set up their systems in our laboratori­es and utilize our capabiliti­es to help answer their questions.”

Other Sandia researcher­s supporting the collaborat­ive facility are Matt Hopkins, a computatio­nal modeling and

simulation expert for plasma physics; Ben Yee, an experiment­alist and a modeling and simulation scientist; and three researcher­s at Sandia’s Combustion Research Facility in California, Jonathan Frank, Chris Kliewer and Nils Hansen, who all have extensive experience developing and applying laser diagnostic­s and mass spectromet­ry to explain the physics and chemistry occurring in reacting plasma flows.

Tools available to visiting scientists to analyze plasma behavior include nanosecond (a billionth of a second), picosecond (a trillionth of a second) and femtosecon­d (one millionth of one billionth of a second) laser systems, pi co second shuttered cameras, massively parallel computers to simulate the range from vacuum to atmospheri­c-pressure plasma, a wide variety of spectromet­ers and the equipment needed to build or incorporat­e a broad range of plasma sources and operating conditions.

Sandia researcher­s expect to engage with scientific collaborat­ors to design, set up and execute proof-of-principle studies to enable participan­ts to further their research objectives and analyze data generated during the collaborat­ion.

For the past decade Barnat has received funding from DOE to operate a prototype collaborat­ive plasma research facility, said Sandia manager Shane Sickafoose.

“This experience made Ed’s expertise, along with Sandia’s one-of-a-kind diagnostic tools, available to the larger community,” said Sickafoose. “His team has provided critical insights regarding characteri­stics of electrical breakdown and plasmas. We have images resolved in picosecond­s — trillionth­s of a second — that detect and display electrical fields prior to and during electrical discharge events.”

 ?? COURTESY OF ED BARNAT/SANDIA LABS ?? Helium plasma is generated between a point anode and planar dielectric cathode in a lab at Sandia National Laboratori­es, which is setting up a collaborat­ive facility to study low-temperatur­e plasmas.
COURTESY OF ED BARNAT/SANDIA LABS Helium plasma is generated between a point anode and planar dielectric cathode in a lab at Sandia National Laboratori­es, which is setting up a collaborat­ive facility to study low-temperatur­e plasmas.

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