toyonline
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According to low frequency, the problem can be analyzed as AC electrostatic problem.
A parallel field will be distorted by any dielectric material, this is also the case for a glass tube. For this reason, the field inside and around the tube isn't exactly parallel.
Of course any dielectric or conductive substance inside the tube will further modify the field.
For a simulation/calculation of the field pattern, the wall thickness matters.
That's rather a glass cylinder than a tube.
What's the distance between glass and electrodes?
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Different glasses have different Er, between 4 and about 6.5
Means they are effectively touching the glass.
In tis case the field strength in the bore will be slightly higher (e.g. 25 %) than the undistorted free field.
Why can't you use the electrodes inside of glass tube? Then the E field between them is not affected`by glass. Look on historical CRTs used in oscilloscopes for electron beam drive.
On the other hand, I do not understand your statement of slightly higher field inside. Since the dipole of glass imposed by electrodes will produce additional inside electric field at opposite direction, I think the total field strength inside the glass tube will be somehow reduced (incomplete shielding effect of the dielectric).
There's in fact a shielding effect. But it's compensated or even overcompensated by bringing the electrodes near to the glass. With 0.5 mm distance, the in-bore fieldstrength is still slightly higher (7%) than the undistorted field strength without dielectricum. The effect is cancelled with further increasing the electrode to glass distance.
On the other hand, you get higher field strength by attaching quarter arc electrodes directly to the glass (about doubled).
The field picture was generated with QuickField Student Edition.
I would expect some calculations first:
- ion energy, mass and respective speed
- length of acceleration zone and time of flight
- expected deflection
Glass has a permittivity of around 4 , the same as paper and circuit board material. Being a good insulator, it will not affect the conducted field at 1MHz however charges may accumulate on contaminated air or surfaces which may result in a partial discharge in a tiny gap < 300Vpp, so keep it clean.
Light weight gasses may also reduce the dielectric breakdown voltage in the chamber relative to air, but glass has a higher breakdown voltage than air.
There should be no problems penetrating a glass tube but if you want a low voltage breakdown for ionizing the gasses then you will put in high power RF , with an inert gas heating up the contaminant gas stream and end up with a gas chromatography with >100W of RF power.
You have been initially talking about 1 MHz RF field, now it seems that you are applying DC. But a DC field inside the glass tube will be immediately neutralized by trapped ions.
You are probably right that the field distribution will survive at least several seconds before it's neutralized by the accumulated ions. In so far you should be able to apply field if you switch the polarity now and then.
Is it atmospheric pressure? In a first order, the ions are carried by the gas stream. Lateral drift according to electrical field is only a minor effect.
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