Plasma Physics: The Fourth State of Matter
More than 99% of the visible universe is plasma — ionised gas in which free electrons and ions respond collectively to electromagnetic fields. The Sun is a plasma ball. Lightning is plasma. So are fluorescent lights, fusion reactors, and the aurora borealis. Yet plasma behaves unlike any other state of matter.
1. What Is Plasma?
When a gas is heated sufficiently or exposed to strong electric fields, electrons are stripped from atoms — a process called ionisation. The resulting mixture of positive ions and free electrons is called plasma. Unlike neutral gas, plasma is electrically conducting and responds to electromagnetic fields.
Plasma is not simply "hot gas." A neutral gas of ions plus electrons would just be hot gas. What makes plasma special is its collective behaviour: the long-range Coulomb forces mean that disturbing one region affects all other regions simultaneously — the whole plasma responds in concert.
The degree of ionisation depends on temperature:
- Flame (3000 K): ~0.1% ionised (weakly ionised)
- Fluorescent lamp discharge: ~0.01% ionised but fully plasma-like
- Solar corona: >10⁶ K, fully ionised hydrogen/helium
- Fusion reactor: 100–150 million K, fully ionised deuterium/tritium
2. Debye Shielding & Plasma Criteria
If a positive charge is placed in a plasma, electrons are attracted to it and ions repelled. The cloud of electrons screens the charge at distances beyond the Debye length:
3. Plasma Oscillations & Waves
Displace the electrons in a plasma slightly — they feel the restoring electric force of the ions left behind. They oscillate at the plasma frequency:
Plasmas support a rich variety of waves beyond simple oscillations:
- Electron plasma waves (Langmuir waves): Longitudinal oscillations of electrons. Can be driven by laser pulses — basis of laser-wakefield particle acceleration.
- Ion acoustic waves: Longitudinal waves driven by ion pressure gradient. Analogous to sound waves in neutral gas.
- Alfvén waves: Transverse oscillations of field-line-frozen plasma in a magnetic field. Propagate along B at the Alfvén speed v_A = B/√(μ₀ρ). Critical in solar corona heating.
4. Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD)
For large-scale, slow motions, plasma can be treated as a single conducting fluid described by the MHD equations — a combination of Navier-Stokes fluid dynamics and Maxwell's electromagnetism:
MHD equilibrium requires ∇p = J×B — the pressure gradient is balanced by the magnetic (Lorentz) force. This is the fundamental equation for plasma confinement in fusion devices.
5. Fusion Confinement
Deuterium-tritium fusion requires temperatures of 100-150 million K. At these temperatures, no material wall can contain the plasma — instead, magnetic fields confine it:
- Tokamak: Toroidal (doughnut-shaped) device. Magnetic field has two components: toroidal (from external coils) and poloidal (from plasma current ~15 MA). The combination winds helically around the torus — preventing drift instabilities. ITER (currently under construction) uses 18 superconducting magnets at 11.8 T to confine plasma at 150 million K.
- Stellarator: All magnetic fields from external coils only — no plasma current. More stable but complex coil geometry. Wendelstein 7-X (Germany) can sustain plasma for 30 minutes continuously.
- Lawson criterion: For net fusion energy, the product n·T·τ_E must exceed a minimum value: n·T·τ_E > 3×10²¹ m⁻³·keV·s. Modern tokamaks approach this ignition condition.
6. Plasma Instabilities
Plasmas are prone to instabilities that disrupt confinement — the central challenge of fusion research:
- Kink instability (m=1 mode): If a current-carrying plasma cord bends, the magnetic pressure increases on the inside of the bend, amplifying the kink. The Kruskal-Shafranov condition q > 1 avoids this in tokamaks.
- Rayleigh-Taylor instability: Heavier plasma on top of lighter (or light plasma supported by a magnetic field). Small perturbations grow — like a density-inverted fluid. Problematic in inertial fusion implosions.
- Weibel instability: Velocity anisotropy in electron distribution → spontaneous generation of current filaments and magnetic fields. Relevant to laser-plasma interactions and astrophysical shocks.
- Disruptions in tokamaks: Rapid termination of plasma current via MHD instabilities. Can occur in milliseconds, depositing gigajoules of energy on the first wall. Disruption avoidance/mitigation is a major ITER engineering challenge.
7. Industrial & Natural Plasmas
- Fluorescent lamps and LEDs: Mercury vapour plasma in a low-pressure discharge emits UV, converted to visible light by phosphors. Modern technology: dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasmas for ozone generation and surface treatment.
- Plasma etching (semiconductor fabrication): Reactive plasma chemically and physically removes material in precise patterns during chip manufacturing. Essential for sub-10-nm transistor fabrication.
- Plasma thrusters (Hall effect thrusters): Xenon ions accelerated by electric fields to 20-80 km/s. Specific impulse ~1600-3000 s (vs ~450 s for chemical rockets). Used on hundreds of commercial satellites and deep space missions (Dawn, BepiColombo).
- Aurora borealis/australis: Charged particles from the solar wind travel along Earth's magnetic field lines into the polar atmosphere. They excite oxygen and nitrogen atoms; the light emitted as those atoms de-excite is the aurora. Green aurora: oxygen at 557.7 nm (100-150 km alt). Red aurora: oxygen at 630 nm (>200 km). Blue/purple: nitrogen.
- Ball lightning: Reported spherical luminous plasma phenomenon lasting seconds to minutes. Not fully explained, though several plasma models (microwave cavities, oxidising silicon particles) exist.