Bulletin of the American Physical Society
74th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 66, Number 7
Monday–Friday, October 4–8, 2021;
Virtual: GEC Platform
Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA
Session TF13: Electric Propulsion
8:00 AM–10:00 AM,
Friday, October 8, 2021
Virtual
Room: GEC platform
Chair: Gabe Xu, University of Alabama in Huntsville
Abstract: TF13.00001 : Technology Development for In-space Nuclear Electric Propulsion
8:00 AM–8:30 AM
Presenter:
Kurt Polzin
(NASA – George C. Marshall Space Flight Center)
Author:
Kurt Polzin
(NASA – George C. Marshall Space Flight Center)
missions. The nuclear power system contemplates using a high temperature light-weight nuclear reactor
for the production of electrical power in the range of 2-5 MWe with a 3-10 year service life. A myriad of
technology options exist that could potentially achieve these mission objectives. Significant technology
development is required to narrow the field of design options that could be used for a NEP-powered
vehicle.
The NEP system is comprised of five major critical technology elements: the nuclear power source,
the system to convert thermal power into electrical power, a large radiator to serve as the cold-side of the
power conversion thermodynamic cycle, the electric propulsion system, and a power management and
distribution system that will deliver the power to the propulsion system and provide required electrical
isolation between different components. At the system level, each of these technology elements must
operate in concert. For example, system extracting heat from the nuclear reactor must be compatible
with the input required for the power conversion system. NASA’s Space Nuclear Propulsion (SNP)
project has conducted a number of technical interchange meetings to survey technology options for each
critical element.
In this presentation, we discuss the current state-of-the-art for each sub-system and the options that
the SNP NEP team has identified for potential parallel-path development and technology maturation. The
development path for each technology is distinct, and involves hardware development and testing
supported by significant modeling and simulation of each element.
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