Lab Pictures 7
August 12, 2008; Room 102-A, Research II
NCSU, Raleigh NC
With the assistance of Chris Lease (courtesy of the Research Opportunities for Undergraduates program), who helped during June and July, I've made new antenna designs to test. The old open coils (as seen in the background of this page) were copper wire coated with ceramic, and caused plasma inside the coils primarily with little outside. Thus the next step was to fill the coils; that was done at first with polyclay, which then had a coat of high-temperature silicone. This was very provisional and only done because it was cheap and easy to test the basic geometry.
The silicone burned and the polyclay was not durable, but it did show that the main part of the discharge was at the base, highly undesirable. Next came three different patterns of aluminum foil to shield the outside and help make the plasma form all along the antenna. This was especially effective when the foil then was coated with ceramic, and when the foil was in the form of triangles.
Next comes the Mark 2 antennas; 10 ga. copper wire embedded in epoxy, forming a cone (much less truncated than the previous helix), then coated in a silica composite ceramic. This also fires off at the base, but in this case the base does not burn as it is thick copper pipe and plate. Then I added copper triangles to extend the plasma along the antenna. This shield functions as a kind of balun; it helps ensure that the impedance of the antenna varies along its length, thus matching the environment somewhere at all times. I found that this initial triangle pattern works well but would be improved if extended very near to the tip, so now I'll take 4 of the 8 triangles off, replace them with bigger and longer ones, and try again. Finally after that's optimized I'll try coating the shield with ceramic and see if it makes enough difference to merit the bother and expense.