2006 48th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 30–November 3 2006;
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Session QI2: Basic Plasma Physics II
2:00 PM–5:00 PM,
Wednesday, November 1, 2006
Philadelphia Marriott Downtown
Room: Grand Salon CDE
Chair: Mark Koepke, West Virginia University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.DPP.QI2.5
Abstract: QI2.00005 : Kinetic effects in Hall thruster discharge
4:00 PM–4:30 PM
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Abstract
Author:
Igor Kaganovich
(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory)
The purpose of the talk is to describe recent advances in nonlocal electron
kinetics in low-pressure plasmas. The talk will briefly review the invited
papers of ``Nonlocal, Collisionless Electron Transport in Plasmas''
workshop, which are published in the special issue of IEEE Transactions on
Plasma Science \textbf{34}, N3 (2006). As an example of importance of taking
into account kinetic effects, the Hall thruster will be discussed. Recent
analytical studies and particle-in-cell simulations suggested that the
electron velocity distribution function in a Hall thruster plasma is
non-Maxwellian and anisotropic. The electron average kinetic energy in the
direction parallel to walls is several times larger than the electron
average kinetic energy in direction normal to the walls. Electrons are
stratified into several groups depending on their origin (e.g., plasma
discharge or thruster channel walls) and confinement (e.g., lost on the
walls or trapped in the plasma). Practical analytical formulas are derived
for wall fluxes, secondary electron fluxes, plasma parameters and
conductivity. The calculations based on analytical formulas agree well with
the results of numerical simulations. The self-consistent analysis
demonstrates that elastic electron scattering on collisions with atoms and
ions plays a key role in formation of the electron velocity distribution
function and plasma-wall interaction. The fluxes of electrons from the
plasma bulk are shown to be proportional to the rate of scattering to loss
cone, thus collision frequency determines the wall potential and secondary
electron fluxes. Secondary electron emission from the walls is shown to
enhance the electron conductivity across the magnetic field, while having
almost no effect on insulating properties of the near-wall sheaths. Such a
self-consistent decoupling between secondary electron emission effects on
electron energy losses and electron crossed-field transport is currently not
captured by the existing fluid and hybrid models of the Hall thrusters.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.DPP.QI2.5