Abstract |
PICLas
1 is a parallel high-order three-dimensional PIC-DSMC solver developed cooperatively
by the Institute of Space Systems and Institute of Aerodynamics and Gas Dynamics at the
University of Stuttgart. Application areas include the simulation of electric propulsion
systems, atmospheric entry manoeuvres and laser ablation. As other state-of-the-art simulation
codes, PICLas couples methods that consider charged particles as well as particle collisions
with chemical reactions, which are handeled in a stochastic manner.. Possible chemical
reactions that occur at different stages within a plasma, are modeled on a microscopic level
by employing the recently developed Q-K model
2.
The talk will focus on the combined concepts realised in PICLas for the simulation of
reactive plasma flows. Additional emphasis will be directed towards the laser ablation of
metals, where the impacting laser generates a plasma plume in front of a surface that expands
into vacuum or a background medium. Different effects within the expanding plume are
responsible for charge separation and particle acceleration
3, which fundamentally affect the expansion characteristics that are important for
subsequent laser-plasma interactions.
1. C.-D. Munz, M. Auweter-Kurtz, S. Fasoulas, A. Mirza, P. Ortwein, M. Pfeiffer, and T.
Stindl. ”Coupled Particle-In-Cell and Direct Simulation Monte Carlo method for simulating
reactive plasma flows”. Comptes Rendus Mécanique 342.10-11 (2014), 662−670.
2. G. A. Bird, “The QK model for gas-phase chemical reaction rates”, Physics of Fluids, Vol.
23, Issue 10, 2011, p. 106101.
3. T. Nedelea and H. Urbassek, “Particle-in-cell-study of charge-state segregation in
expanding plasmas due to three-body recombination”, Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics,
Vol. 37, Issue 21, 2004, pp. 2981-2986.
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