https://doi.org/10.1051/epjap:2008097
Absolute intensity calibration of emission spectra: application to the forbidden 346 nm nitrogen line for N(2P°) metastable atoms density measurement in flowing afterglow
1
Department of Physics, Iran University of Science & Technology, Narmak, Tehran, 16846-13114, Iran
2
Laboratoire de Spectrométrie Physique, Université Joseph
Fourier de Grenoble & CNRS, 38402 St Martin d'Hères, France
Corresponding author: Nader.Sadeghi@ujf-grenoble.fr
Received:
4
February
2008
Revised:
11
March
2008
Accepted:
28
March
2008
Published online:
30
May
2008
A novel method, based on emission signal from the
excitation transfer reaction: Ar*(3P2) + N2(X)
N2*(C3
) + Ar, is proposed for the intensity
calibration of the spectroscopic optical detection system in absolute scale.
It is applied for the measurement of N(2P°) metastable atoms
density in the Short Lived Afterglow (SLA) of a 440 Pa nitrogen discharge
produced by a 433 MHz resonant cavity. This density is deduced from the
absolute intensity of the forbidden N(2P°–4S°) line at
346.65 nm, whose transition probability is only 0.005 s−1. The
N(2P°) density variation in the SLA resembles those of
N2(A3
) metastable molecules and electrons or the
emission intensities of first positive (1+), second positive (2+)
and first negative (1−) systems of N2. It first decays after the
discharge zone up to a minimum and hence increases by almost a factor of
thirty to reach a maximum value of 6 × 1017 m−3 at the maximum of
the SLA. It is proposed that N(2P°) density results from a local
equilibrium between its production: N2(A3
) + N(4S)
N(2P) + N2(X1
, v) and
loss: N2(X1
, v ≥ 10)+ N(2P)
N2 (A3
) + N(4S) reactions, which
strongly couple the atomic and molecular metastable states and hence recycle
N2(A3
) metastable molecules produced in the SLA.
The balance equation of N(2P°) density provides a
N2(X1
; v ≥ 10) density of 6.5 × 1020
m−3 at the maximum of the SLA. This corresponds to 1% of the total
N2 molecules in vibrationally excited levels v ≥ 10.
PACS: 52.20.Hv – Atomic, molecular, ion, and heavy-particle collisions / 33.70.Fd – Absolute and relative line and band intensities / 52.70.Kz – Optical (ultraviolet, visible, infrared) measurements
© EDP Sciences, 2008