In this work, we studied hollow cylindrical plasma
bullets propagating along the grooved glass rod in a single
electrode configuration. The plasma source was a cylindrical shell
consisted of two coaxial glass cylinders. The surface of the inner
cylinder was structured by creating grooves on its surface to
investigate the plasma bullet acceleration through the traveling
shell. The corresponding plasma jet was driven by a 6.2-kHz
sinusoidal waveform using helium gas. Optical and electrical
characteristics proved that the plasma jet was working in a stable
bullet mode. The propagation speed of the hollow cylindrical
bullet was evaluated along with the downstream of the jet axis
inside and outside of the plasma carrier shell. The results showed
that the charge associated with the bullets and corresponding
root-mean-square (rms) value of the alternative current (ac)
electric field were increased by creating the grooves on the path
of the bullets. It was observed that the radiation intensity of the
plasma was increased around each groove, too. The structured
inner cylinder revealed that the dielectric properties play an essential rule in the plasma bullet propagation through tubes.