The present invention relates to microdischarge devices and, in particular, to microdischarge devices and arrays including nanoporous dielectric-encapsulated electrodes.
Microplasma (microdischarge) devices have been under development for almost a decade and devices having microcavities as small as 10 μm have been fabricated. Arrays of microplasma devices as large as 4*104 pixels in ˜4 cm2 of chip area, for a packing density of 104 pixels per cm2, have been fabricated. Furthermore, applications of these devices in areas as diverse as photodetection in the visible and ultraviolet, environmental sensing, and plasma etching of semiconductors have been demonstrated and several are currently being explored for commercial potential. Many of the microplasma devices reported to date have been driven by DC voltages and have incorporated dielectric films of essentially homogeneous materials.
Regardless of the application envisioned for microplasma devices, the success of this technology will hinge on several factors, of which the most important are manufacturing cost, lifetime, and radiant efficiency. A method of device fabrication that addresses at least the first two of these factors is, therefore, highly desirable.
In a first embodiment of the invention, a microdischarge device is provided that includes a first electrode encapsulated in a dielectric, which may be a nanoporous dielectric film. A second electrode is provided which may also be encapsulated with a dielectric. The electrodes are configured to ignite a discharge in a microcavity when a time-varying (an AC, RF, bipolar or a pulsed DC, etc.) potential is applied between the electrodes. In specific embodiments of the invention, the second electrode may be a screen covering the microcavity opening and the microcavity may be closed at one end. In some embodiments of the invention, the second electrode may be in direct contact with the first electrode. In other embodiments, a gap separates the electrodes.
In another embodiment of the invention, a microdischarge device array is provided. The array includes a plurality of electrode pairs. Each electrode pair includes a first electrode and a second electrode with each electrode comprising a metal encapsulated with a dielectric. Each pair of electrodes is configured to ignite a discharge in a corresponding microcavity when a time-varying potential is applied between the electrodes. In a specific embodiment of the invention, the electrode pairs are stacked, forming a linear array of microdischarge devices.
In a further embodiment of the invention, a microdischarge device array is provided that includes a planar electrode array including a plurality of metal electrodes encapsulated in a dielectric. The encapsulated electrode array forms a plurality of microcavities. A common electrode is configured to ignite a discharge in each microcavity when a potential is applied between the common electrode and the electrode array. In some embodiments, the common electrode is transparent to the light emitted by the array.
In another embodiment of the invention, a microdischarge device array for display applications is provided. The array includes a first electrode comprising a metal encapsulated with a first dielectric; a plurality of microcavities associated with the first electrode; a second electrode comprising a metal encapsulated with a second dielectric; and a plurality of microcavities associated with the second electrode. The first electrode and the second electrode are configured to ignite a microdischarge in a given microcavity when a potential is applied between the first and second electrode but only if the given microcavity is a member of both the first plurality of microcavities and the second plurality of microcavities.
In another embodiment of the invention, a cylindrical microdischarge device array is provided that includes a metal cylinder (tube). A plurality of microcavities is formed on the inner surface of the cylinder which is then encapsulated with a dielectric. An electrode is disposed along the center axis of the cylinder and the electrode is configured to ignite a discharge in each microcavity when a time-varying potential is applied between the electrode and the cylinder. Toxic gas remediation may be effected by introducing a flow of gas along the center electrode. A potential is applied between the center electrode and the cylinder to ignite a discharge in each microcavity. The discharges dissociate the impurities in the gas as the gas flows through the microcavities. In other embodiments of the invention, this structure may be used for photochemical treatment of gases flowing through the cylinder. It may also serve as a gain medium for a laser.
Embodiments of the invention introduce microdischarge device array geometries and structures for the purpose of scaling the active length and/or area that is required for applications in medicine and photopolymerization (photoprocessing of materials), for example.
The foregoing features of the invention will be more readily understood by reference to the following detailed description, taken with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The present invention may advantageously employ nanoporous dielectrics such as those described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/958,174, filed on even date herewith, entitled “Microdischarge Devices with Encapsulated Electrodes” which is incorporated herein by reference.
In various embodiments of the invention, microdischarge devices are provided that include one or more electrodes encapsulated in a nanoporous dielectric. The nanoporous dielectric may be formed, for example without limitation, by a wet chemical process, as described above. Thus, a variety of device structures may be fabricated economically. These devices include a first electrode encapsulated in the dielectric and a second electrode that may also be encapsulated with the dielectric of the first electrode or another dielectric. The electrodes are configured to ignite a microdischarge in a microcavity (i.e., a cavity having a characteristic dimension (diameter, length of a rectangle, etc.) approximately 500 μm or less) when a time-varying (AC, pulsed DC, etc.) excitation potential is applied between the first and second electrodes. The encapsulated electrodes are not exposed to the microplasma discharge, facilitating a longer electrode life.
A microdischarge device 200 is shown in cross-section in
In another related embodiment of the invention 300, as shown in cross-section in
In a further related embodiment 400 of the invention, as shown in cross-section in
In other embodiments of the invention, both electrodes of the microdischarge device may be encapsulated with a dielectric.
In another embodiment of the invention, as shown in cross-section in
In a further embodiment of the invention, as shown in
The ability to produce nanoporous dielectrics on conducting (e.g., metal) surfaces in any configuration (geometry) may be used to advantage in plasma arrays and processing systems.
As noted earlier, the center electrode 1020, which lies along the axis of the larger cylinder having the microplasma pixels, can be a solid conductor (such as a metal rod or tube) or can alternatively be a transparent conductor deposited onto an optically transparent cylinder (such as quartz tubing). The former design will be of interest for electrically exciting and dissociating gases to produce excited or ground state radicals—whereas the latter will be valuable for photo-exciting a gas or vapor flowing inside the inner (optically transparent) cylinder.
The array of
Several of the devices and arrays described earlier, and those depicted in
A 2×2 array of Al/Al2O3 microdischarge devices, each device having a cylindrical microcavity with a 100 micron diameter (device of
Much larger arrays may be constructed and the entire process may be automated. The low cost of the materials required, the ease of device assembly, and the stable well-behaved glow discharges produced in the areas tested to date, all indicate that the microdischarge devices and arrays of embodiments of the present invention can be of value wherever low cost, bright and flexible sources of visible and ultraviolet light are required.
It will, of course, be apparent to those skilled in the art that the present invention is not limited to the aspects of the detailed description set forth above. In any of the described embodiments, the dielectric used to encapsulate an electrode may be a nanoporous dielectric. While aluminum encapsulated with alumina (Al/Al2O3) has been used as an exemplary material in these devices, a wide variety of materials (e.g., W/WO3) may also be used. Further, in any of the above described embodiments, the microcavities of the device may be filled with a gas at a desired pressure to facilitate microdischarges with particular characteristics. The microcavities may be filled with a discharge gas, such as the atomic rare gases, N2, and the rare gas-halogen donor gas mixtures. Gas pressure and gas mixture composition may be chosen to maintain a favorable number density of the desired radiating species. Various changes and modifications of this invention as described will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention as defined in the appended claims.
This invention was made with Government assistance under U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research grant Nos. F49620-00-1-0391 and F49620-03-1-0391. The Government has certain rights in this invention.
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