Usage of generated radiation DBDs can be used to generate
optical radiation by the relaxation of excited species in the plasma. The main application here is the generation of UV-radiation. Such
excimer ultraviolet lamps can produce light with short wavelengths which can be used to produce
ozone in industrial scales. Ozone is still used extensively in industrial air and water treatment. as several nitrogen-oxygen compounds are generated as discharge products. applied further to "soft"
plasma cleaning and increasing
adhesion of surfaces prepared for coating or gluing (
flat panel display technologies). A dielectric barrier discharge is one method of plasma treatment of textiles at atmospheric pressure and room temperature. The treatment can be used to modify the surface properties of the textile to improve
wettability, improve the
absorption of dyes and
adhesion, and for
sterilization. DBD plasma provides a dry treatment that doesn't generate waste water or require drying of the fabric after treatment. For textile treatment, a DBD system requires a few kilovolts of alternating current, at between 1 and 100 kilohertz. Voltage is applied to insulated electrodes with a millimetre-size gap through which the textile passes. An
excimer lamp can be used as a powerful source of short-wavelength ultraviolet light, useful in chemical processes such as surface cleaning of semiconductor wafers. The lamp relies on a dielectric barrier discharge in an atmosphere of xenon and other gases to produce the excimers.
Water treatment An additional process when using
chlorine gas for removal of bacteria and organic contaminates in drinking water supplies. Treatment of public swimming baths, aquariums and fish ponds involves the use of
ultraviolet radiation produced when a dielectric mixture of
xenon gas and glass are used.
Surface modification of materials An application where DBDs can be successfully used is to modify the characteristics of a material surface. The modification can target a change in its hydrophilicity, the surface activation, the introduction of functional groups, and so on. Polymeric surfaces are easy to be processed using DBDs which, in some cases, offer a high processing area.
Medicine Dielectric barrier discharges were used to generate relatively large volume diffuse plasmas at atmospheric pressure and applied to inactivate bacteria in the mid 1990s. This eventually led to the development of a new field of applications, the biomedical applications of plasmas. In the field of biomedical application, three main approaches have emerged: direct therapy, surface modification, and plasma polymer deposition. Plasma polymers can control and steer biological–biomaterial interactions (i.e. adhesion, proliferation, and differentiation) or inhibition of bacteria adhesion.
Aeronautics Interest in
plasma actuators as active
flow control devices is growing rapidly due to their lack of mechanical parts, light weight and high response frequency. == Properties ==