Ion Mobility
This definition page has been automatically generated. You can help ExoDictionary by expanding, updating, or correcting it. |
This autostub has not yet had its initial copyediting proof and may contain significant formatting and even factual errors. You can improve Exodictionary by cleaning up the page markup and verifying that the definition is correct and then removing this tag. |
This autostub has not yet had its initial categorization proof and may be categorized incorrectly. You can improve Exodictionary by removing inappropriate categories and then removing this tag. |
Ion Mobility
</dt>
In gaseous electric conduction, the average velocity with which a given
ion drifts through a specified gas under the influence of an electric
field of unit strength. Mobility's are commonly expressed in units of
centimeters per second per volt per centimeter. Also called ionic mobility.
</dd>
In a vacuum, a single gaseous ion subjected to any nonzero potential
gradient would accelerate indefinitely; but in the midst of a gas the ion
continually experiences collisions with gas molecules. These encounters tend
to break up its trajectory into a series of short intervals of acceleration
punctuated by deflections. The net result is that the ion's gross motion
resembles drift at a uniform velocity. The mobility depends not only upon the
nature of the ion and gas but also upon the density of the gas, for the latter
controls the mean free path of the ion.
</dd>
References
This article is based on NASA's Dictionary of Technical Terms for Aerospace Use