Fluids

Fluids

Topics related to Fluent, CFX, Turbogrid and more.

How to simulate Plasma Argon using Ansys Fluent?

    • aerorocker
      Subscriber

      I am trying to insert plasma argon inside a vacuum chamber. The ultimate goal is to find the gradient in the coating thickness of the plasma onto the holder that is placed inside the chamber. I am using Fluent to solve this. But I can not figure out how to define plasma argon as my fluid ( I only found ar, ar+, and ar-liquid in the fluent library). Should I use UDF to define the plasma argon?

    • Amine Ben Hadj Ali
      Ansys Employee
      Navier-Stokes cannot deal with Vaccum but only near vaccum conditions: read more about Knudsen and continuous formulation.
      Plasma is the 4th state if one can use that word to describe a completely ionized fluid at high temperature. You need to adjust the material properties: Plasma is general defined a mixture of components, account for reactions, radiations, etc..
      More on plasma can be found here: https://www.plasma-universe.com/plasma-classification-types-of-plasma/
    • aerorocker
      Subscriber
      Actually, our system has three turbomolecular pumps to achieve vacuum conditions. The ideal pressure when we normally use the operation is approx 8x10^-9 mbar. Is Navier stokes applicable at this pressure?
    • Rob
      Forum Moderator
      To an extent it'll depend on the domain scale: read up on continuum theory and the Knudsen Number.
    • A B
      Subscriber
      Hi Aerorocker I'm trying to simulate a similar problem in a PVD reactor. I've done some simulations. Is it possible to discuss and exchange some ideas? please feel free to send me an email or a zoom link or another contact.
Viewing 4 reply threads
  • The topic ‘How to simulate Plasma Argon using Ansys Fluent?’ is closed to new replies.