RESUMEN
We investigate the Ar(+)-Fe asymmetric charge transfer (ACT) reaction using a combination of plasma diagnostics methods and a kinetic model of the afterglow plasma, which allow monitoring of the temporal evolution of the densities of different species. The iron vapor is created inside a discharge cell by cathode sputtering; its density is measured by atomic absorption spectroscopy. The rate coefficient of the reaction is evaluated from the emission intensity decay of Fe(+)∗ lines pumped by the ACT process in the He-Ar-Fe and Ar-Fe afterglow plasmas. The measurements yield a rate coefficient k = 7.6( ± 3.0) × 10(-9) cm(3) s(-1) at T = 300 K.
Asunto(s)
Argón/química , Hierro/química , Helio/química , Iones/química , Cinética , Espectrofotometría Atómica , VacioRESUMEN
Unlike α- and γ-mode operation, electrons accelerated by strong drift and ambipolar electric fields in the plasma bulk and at the sheath edges are found to dominate the ionization in strongly electronegative discharges. These fields are caused by a low bulk conductivity and local maxima of the electron density at the sheath edges, respectively. This drift-ambipolar mode is investigated by kinetic particle simulations, experimental phase-resolved optical emission spectroscopy, and an analytical model in CF(4). Mode transitions induced by voltage and pressure variations are studied.
RESUMEN
A simple two-parameter model resembling the classical voter model is introduced to describe macroecological properties of tropical tree communities. The parameters of the model characterize the speciation- and global-dispersion rates. Monte Carlo type computer simulations are performed on the model, investigating species abundances and the spatial distribution of individuals and species. Simulation results are critically compared with the experimental data obtained from a tree census on a 50 hectare area of the Barro Colorado Island (BCI), Panama. Fitting to only two observable quantities from the BCI data (total species number and the slope of the log-log species-area curve at the maximal area), it is possible to reproduce the full species-area curve, the relative species abundance distribution, and a more realistic spatial distribution of species.