It seems we have three uses of the word "Plasma" here. The biological plasma is quite different from the other two, and is simply a water-based liquid carrying various dissolved minerals and suspended organic solids used as a support and transport mechanism for living cells.
A Plasma gas such as is found in the ionosphere is one that is highly charged due to removal of electrons from the atoms in the gas.
The word Plasma may also be used to describe a more fundamental grouping of particles, such as the electron flux in a spark discarge, whethor from a Van de Graff generator or from any other generator, battery, etc. This type of plasma involves only electrons (or other fundamental particles) and is not made up of atoms at all.
Plasma then in general refers to a gas or liquid which carries charged particles. Specifically, the charges may be carried on ions, disolved in a liquid such as blood plasma, or the charges on atoms, in an electron deprived ionic gas in the upper atmosphere, or in the liquid-like flux of the bare charges themselves, in a spark or other beam of energetic fundamental particles.
In this last definition, many of the behaviors of electrons in conducters like ordinary copper wire can be thought of as if the electrons (on the surface anyway) are to some degree ionized, or free of the atoms which support them. The flux or current in the wire can be thought of as if the surface electrons were free to flow along the wire like a liquid or a gas might flow through a pipe. Even though these electrons behave in many ways like a liquid or a gas, and so fit the definition of a plasma, the wire which carries them is still quite solid to the touch and can be cool or even cold.
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