Radio-Frequency Oxygen Plasma as a Sterilization Source
An oxygen plasma sustained at 13.56 MHz in a standardized reactor with a planar induction coil was used for biological decontamination experiments. Optical emission, mass spectrometry, Langmuir probe, and electrical measurements were applied to detection of chemical species and ion-energy and flux a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | AIAA journal 2004-04, Vol.42 (4), p.823-832 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | An oxygen plasma sustained at 13.56 MHz in a standardized reactor with a planar induction coil was used for biological decontamination experiments. Optical emission, mass spectrometry, Langmuir probe, and electrical measurements were applied to detection of chemical species and ion-energy and flux analysis. These diagnostics identified a plasma-mode transition in the range of 13-67-Pa pressure and 100-330-W power to the induction coil. At higher pressure and lower power, the plasma was sustained in a dim mode (primarily by stray capacitive coupling). A primarily inductive bright mode was attained at lower pressure and higher power. The coupling mode of plasma operation was then monitored by emission spectroscopy on an analogous, scaled-down reactor for biological degradation tests. Plasmid DNA degradation efficacies were compared in both plasma modes. DNA removal was equivalent 25% more efficient in the inductively coupled mode than in the capacitively coupled mode at the same power. The fast degradation was attributed to synergetic mechanisms (photo- and ion-assisted etching by oxygen atoms and perhaps O*2 metastable molecules). Volatilization rates of the decomposition products (CO2, CO, N2, OH, H) evolving from the microbial (Deinococcus radiodurans) and polypeptide samples exposed to the plasma were compared. A plasma sustained in Martian atmosphere is considered. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
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ISSN: | 0001-1452 1533-385X |
DOI: | 10.2514/1.9562 |