Abstract
This article reports on experiments in a nonequilibrium plasma produced by nanosecond repetitively pulsed (NRP) spark discharges in water vapor at 450 K and atmospheric pressure. The objective is to determine the electron number density in the post-discharge, with spatial and temporal resolution, to gain a better understanding of the discharge development and chemical kinetics. Electron number densities were measured in water vapor from the broadenings and shifts of the H-alpha and H-beta lines of the hydrogen Balmer series and of the atomic oxygen triplet at 777 nm. For an average reduced electric field of about 150 Td, high electron densities up to 3x10(18) cm(-3) are measured at the cathode, up to 5 x 10(17) cm(-3) at the anode, and up to 4x10(16) cm(-3) in the interelectrode gap. The high density near the electrodes is attributed to ionization enhancement and secondary electron emission due to the high electric field in the plasma sheath. In the middle of the inter-electrode gap, we show that the electron density mainly decays by electron attachment reactions. The dissociation fraction of water vapor is estimated to be around 2% in the middle of the gap.