Effects of Ingested vs. Injected Propellant on Radio-Frequency Discharge Plasma Properties

Radio-frequency (RF) ion thrusters are characterized in vacuum test facilities differentiated by pumping speed and thus subject to varying levels of neutral propellant ingestion that affect plasma plume properties and artificially raise the pressure of neutral propellant available to the thruster. T...

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Main Authors: Natalie R. S. Caruso, Mitchell L. R. Walker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Physics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphy.2018.00161/full
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spelling doaj-532baed5819641148eda703ab6ef2d842020-11-25T01:16:07ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physics2296-424X2019-01-01610.3389/fphy.2018.00161418931Effects of Ingested vs. Injected Propellant on Radio-Frequency Discharge Plasma PropertiesNatalie R. S. Caruso0Mitchell L. R. Walker1NRC Post-Doctoral Researcher, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, United StatesHigh-Power Electric Propulsion Laboratory, Georgia Institute of Technology, Aerospace Engineering, Atlanta, GA, United StatesRadio-frequency (RF) ion thrusters are characterized in vacuum test facilities differentiated by pumping speed and thus subject to varying levels of neutral propellant ingestion that affect plasma plume properties and artificially raise the pressure of neutral propellant available to the thruster. These plasma properties are often used to calculate anticipated thrust values for RF thruster prototypes without consideration of the effects ingested neutral propellant may have beyond increasing the amount of neutral atoms available. This study compares exit plane plasma properties for nominal operation of a replica of the Madison Helicon Experiment operating at a propellant flow rate of 2 standard cm3/min argon subject to 3.8 cm3/min ingested argon flow with thruster operation over a range of propellant flow rates (1.3–60 standard cm3/min argon) subject to a maximum ingested argon flow rate of 0.8 cm3/min to determine the validity of compensating for neutral ingestion at higher operating pressures by increasing supplied propellant flow rates when operating at lower facility pressures. This study finds that no single operating condition at the 0.8 cm3/min ingestion condition reproduces all the plasma property values recorded at the nominal flow rate at the 3.8 cm3/min ingestion condition. The inability of plasma properties to be reproduced at a single adjusted flow rate is a result of the differing magnitudes of influence neutral ingestion effects have on individual plume properties.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphy.2018.00161/fullneutral ingestionfacility effectsRF dischargeion densityelectron temperature
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natalie R. S. Caruso
Mitchell L. R. Walker
spellingShingle Natalie R. S. Caruso
Mitchell L. R. Walker
Effects of Ingested vs. Injected Propellant on Radio-Frequency Discharge Plasma Properties
Frontiers in Physics
neutral ingestion
facility effects
RF discharge
ion density
electron temperature
author_facet Natalie R. S. Caruso
Mitchell L. R. Walker
author_sort Natalie R. S. Caruso
title Effects of Ingested vs. Injected Propellant on Radio-Frequency Discharge Plasma Properties
title_short Effects of Ingested vs. Injected Propellant on Radio-Frequency Discharge Plasma Properties
title_full Effects of Ingested vs. Injected Propellant on Radio-Frequency Discharge Plasma Properties
title_fullStr Effects of Ingested vs. Injected Propellant on Radio-Frequency Discharge Plasma Properties
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Ingested vs. Injected Propellant on Radio-Frequency Discharge Plasma Properties
title_sort effects of ingested vs. injected propellant on radio-frequency discharge plasma properties
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physics
issn 2296-424X
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Radio-frequency (RF) ion thrusters are characterized in vacuum test facilities differentiated by pumping speed and thus subject to varying levels of neutral propellant ingestion that affect plasma plume properties and artificially raise the pressure of neutral propellant available to the thruster. These plasma properties are often used to calculate anticipated thrust values for RF thruster prototypes without consideration of the effects ingested neutral propellant may have beyond increasing the amount of neutral atoms available. This study compares exit plane plasma properties for nominal operation of a replica of the Madison Helicon Experiment operating at a propellant flow rate of 2 standard cm3/min argon subject to 3.8 cm3/min ingested argon flow with thruster operation over a range of propellant flow rates (1.3–60 standard cm3/min argon) subject to a maximum ingested argon flow rate of 0.8 cm3/min to determine the validity of compensating for neutral ingestion at higher operating pressures by increasing supplied propellant flow rates when operating at lower facility pressures. This study finds that no single operating condition at the 0.8 cm3/min ingestion condition reproduces all the plasma property values recorded at the nominal flow rate at the 3.8 cm3/min ingestion condition. The inability of plasma properties to be reproduced at a single adjusted flow rate is a result of the differing magnitudes of influence neutral ingestion effects have on individual plume properties.
topic neutral ingestion
facility effects
RF discharge
ion density
electron temperature
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphy.2018.00161/full
work_keys_str_mv AT natalierscaruso effectsofingestedvsinjectedpropellantonradiofrequencydischargeplasmaproperties
AT mitchelllrwalker effectsofingestedvsinjectedpropellantonradiofrequencydischargeplasmaproperties
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