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Fabrication and Performance of a Multi-Discharge Cold Atmospheric Pressure Plasma Array. | LitMetric

Fabrication and Performance of a Multi-Discharge Cold Atmospheric Pressure Plasma Array.

IEEE Trans Plasma Sci IEEE Nucl Plasma Sci Soc

Boise State University in the following departments: Chemistry & Biochemistry: Cornell, Miller, Provost, and Goering; Mechanical & Biomedical Engineering: White, Carlson, Kennedy, and Plumlee; Electrical & Computer Engineering: Croteau and Browning.

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP) is effective at killing bacteria and removing biofilms, as reported in the study.
  • A novel CAP device was developed using a stack of eight linear-discharge elements, creating a treatment area of approximately 5 cm, constructed from Low Temperature Co-fired Ceramic (LTCC) for efficiency.
  • The device generates an Ar/O plasma using a 20 kHz AC voltage, achieving over 99% bacteria kill rate within 60 seconds of exposure, demonstrating its potential for antimicrobial applications.

Article Abstract

Cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP) has been shown to kill bacteria and remove biofilms. Here we report the development of a unique CAP array device consisting of a parallel stack of eight linear-discharge plasma elements that create a ~ 5 cm (2.4 cm × 2 cm) treatment area. The CAP device is fabricated from Low Temperature Co-fired Ceramic (LTCC) layers to create 24 mm long linear-discharge channels (500 m gap) with embedded opposing silver metal electrodes. A 20 kHz AC voltage (0.5-5 kV) applied to the electrodes generates an Ar/O plasma between the plates, with the gas flow directing the reactive species toward the biological sample (biofilms, etc.) to affect the antimicrobial treatment. External ballast resistors were used to study discharge uniformity in the stacked array elements and internal thick film ballast resistors (≈150 kΩ) were developed to create a fully integrated device. Typical element discharge currents were 1-2.5 mA with the total array current tested at 20 mA to provide optimal device uniformity. The plasma discharge was further shown to produce reactive hydrogen peroxide and exert antimicrobial effects on biofilms and contaminated eggshell samples, with >99% of the bacterial cells killed with less than 60 seconds of plasma exposure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8132946PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TPS.2021.3064993DOI Listing

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