研究目的
Investigating the influence of ambient humidity versus feed gas humidity on the production of reactive components by atmospheric pressure plasma jets and their effect on cell viability.
研究成果
The study shows that feed gas humidity has a stronger effect on reactive species generation than ambient humidity. The cell viability correlates with the H2O2 concentration, suggesting its importance in plasma medicine applications.
研究不足
The study focuses on long-living reactive species and their effects on cell viability. The interaction of plasma with biological systems is complex, and further studies are needed to fully understand the mechanisms.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection
The study uses an atmospheric pressure plasma jet (kinpen) shielded by a gas curtain with a defined gas composition. The influence of humidity on long-living reactive species is investigated using infrared absorption spectroscopy.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources
Human skin cells (HaCaT keratinocytes) are treated indirectly with the plasma jet to assess cell viability. The reactive species are detected in the far field of the plasma jet.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials
Atmospheric pressure plasma jet (kinpen), shielding gas curtain, quantum cascade laser absorption spectroscopy, Fourier transformed infrared (IR) absorption spectroscopy, hygrometer (DewMaster, EdgeTech, USA), mass flow controllers (MKS).
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow
The plasma jet is operated with argon feed gas and shielded by artificial air. Humidity is varied in the feed gas and shielding gas. Reactive species are measured using spectroscopy techniques. Cell viability is assessed after plasma treatment.
5:Data Analysis Methods
The concentration of reactive species is calculated from absorption spectra. Cell viability is assessed by resazurin conversion assay.
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