2005 58th Gaseous Electronics Conference
Sunday–Thursday, October 16–20, 2005;
San Jose, California
Session BM1: Plasma Propulsion and Combustion I
8:00 AM–9:30 AM,
Monday, October 17, 2005
Doubletree Hotel
Room: Pine
Chair: L. Vuskovic, Old Dominion University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.GEC.BM1.1
Abstract: BM1.00001 : Micro plasma thruster for small spacecraft
8:00 AM–8:30 AM
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Abstract
Author:
Kouichi Ono
(Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Kyoto University)
A microplasma thruster of electrothermal type has been proposed
using
azimuthally symmetric microwave-excited plasmas, which consists of a
microplasma source and a micronozzle. The microplasma source is
made of a
dielectric chamber 2 mm in inner diameter and 10 mm long covered
with a
metal grounded, producing high temperature plasmas at around
atmospheric
pressures. The micronozzle has a throat 0.2 mm in diameter,
converting high
thermal energy of plasmas into directional kinetic energy of
supersonic
plasma flows. First, we have developed a numerical model for
microwave-excited microplasmas in Ar and plasma flows in the
micronozzle.
The model consists of three modules: a volume-averaged global
model and an
electromagnetic model for microplasma sources, and a
two-temperature fluid
model for micronozzle flows. Numerical results indicated that the
microwave
power absorbed in plasmas increases with increasing microwave
frequency $f$ and
relative permittivity \textit{$\varepsilon $}$_{d}$ of
dielectrics, and that a certain combination
of frequency and permittivity significantly increases the power
absorption.
The micronozzle flow was found to be heavily affected by viscous
dissipation
in thick boundary layers, indicating that shortening the nozzle
length with
increasing half-cone angles suppresses the effects of viscous
loss and thus
enhances the thrust performances. A thrust of 2.5-3.5 mN and a
specific
impulse of 130-180 s were obtained for a given microwave power range
($P_{t}<$10 W), which is applicable to a station-keeping maneuver
for
microspacecraft less than 10 kg. Moreover, we have developed a
microwave-excited microplasma source, based on the model
analysis, with
mullite (\textit{$\varepsilon $}$_{d}\approx $6) and zirconia
(\textit{$\varepsilon $}$_{d}\approx $12-25) being
employed for dielectrics. Experiments were performed at $f$=2 and
4 GHz,$ P_{t}<$10
W, Ar flow rate of 50 sccm, and microplasma chamber pressure of
10 kPa.
Optical emission spectroscopy and Langmuir probe measurement were
employed
for diagnostics of microplasmas, indicating that the ArI emission
intensity
and plasma density $n_{e}$ increase with increasing $f$ and
\textit{$\varepsilon $}$_{d}$, and that the
$n_{e}$ is in the range 10$^{12}-$10$^{13}$ cm$^{-3}$. Moreover, the
rotational temperature $T_{rot}$ of N$_{2}$ added was in the
range 1100-1500
K, and the specific impulse estimated was about 70s.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.GEC.BM1.1