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ELECTRIC PROPULSION
P R E PAR E D B Y
M I S B A H P AT E L
GUIDED BY
P R O F. N A D K A R N I
2016-17
D E PARTM E N T O F M E C H A N I C A L E N G I N E E R I N G
P.E . S . M O D E R N C O L L E G E O F E N G I N E E R I N G , P U N E - 4 110 0 5 .
Literature Review
Sr. Name of Authors Title of Research Paper Summary of Paper
No
.
1 Martinez Sanchez Spacecraft Electric Propulsion This paper addresses the growing use of
et al electric propulsion in the spacecraft
community
2 Marco Sabbadini Electric Spacecraft This paper discusses the Electric
et al Propulsion-ESA propulsion technologys applications of
satellites and space etc
3 Robert G. Jahn et Physics Of Electric Propulsion This text systematically develops the
al concepts of electrical acceleration of
gases for propulsion.
4 Dan M. Goebel et Fundamentals Of Electric This literature contains several books
al Propulsion from the 1960s and numerous journal
articles
5 John R. Brophy et Electric Propulsion for Solar This paper describes the evaluation of
al System Exploration possible advanced solar electric
propulsion
Aim and Objectives
Electrical and electromagnetic rockets differ from chemical rockets with respect to
their performance limitations.
Chemical rockets are essentially energy limited, since the quantity of energy (per
unit mass of propellant) that can be released during combustion is limited by the
fundamental chemical behavior of propellant materials.
Hence Isp of chemical rockets is limited to 450 to 500 s. On theother hand, in
electrical rockets a separate energy source (eg. Nuclear or solar) is used, hence
much higher propellant energy is possible.
The electric rocket engine is a device that converts electric power into a forward-
directed force or thrust by accelerating an ionized propellant (e.g argon, or xenon)
to a very high exhaust velocity.
Types Of Electric Propulsion
1. Electrothermal
Propellant is electrically heated through wall (resistojet) or by electrical
arc discharge (arcjet)
Thermal rocket and our model for thermal thrust chamber applicable
2. Electrostatic
Charged particles (ions) accelerated by electrostatic forces (Ion, Hall
Effect and Kaufmann type thrusters)
3. Electromagnetic
Electrically conducting fluid accelerated by electromagnetic and
pressure forces (Magnetoplasmadynamic Thruster (MPD, PPT))
Comparison Of EP systems
The electrothermal category groups the devices where electromagnetic fields are used to
generate plasma to increase the temperature of the bulk propellant.
The thermal energy imparted to the propellant gas is then converted into kinetic energy
by a nozzle of either solid material or magnetic fields.
Low molecular weight gases (e.g. hydrogen, helium, ammonia) are preferred propellants
for this kind of system.
An electrothermal engine uses a nozzle to convert the heat of a gas into the linear motion
of its molecules so it is a true rocket even though the energy producing the heat comes
from an external source.
1. Resistojets
2. Arcjets
7
Resistojets are electrothermal devices in which the propellant is heated by
passing through a resistively heated chamber or over a resistively heated
element before entering a downstream nozzle. The increase in exhaust
velocity is due to the thermal heating of the propellant, which limits the Isp
to low levels (<500 s).
8
Fig. Low power hydrazine arcjets in use
on TelStar IV communication satellites
If the acceleration is caused mainly by the Coulomb force (i.e. application of a static electric
field in the direction of the acceleration) the device is considered electrostatic.
1. Ion Thruster
2. Hall Thruster
Its key principle is that a voltage difference between two conductors sets up an
electrostatic potential difference that can accelerate ions to produce thrust.
The ions must, of course, be neutralized--often by electrons emitted from a hot filament.
The three main stages of an ion-thruster design are ion production, acceleration, and
neutralization
10
Ion Thruster
12
Electromagnetic Propulsion
Electromagnetic devices pass a large current through a small amount of gas to ionize
propellant
Once ionized, plasma is accelerated by electromagnetic body force called Lorentz
force which is created by interaction of a current (j) with magnetic field (B):F=j x B
PPT consists of a coiled spring that feeds Teflon propellant bar, an igniter plug to
initiate a small-trigger electrical discharge, a capacitor, and electrodes through
which current flows
Plasma is created by ablating Teflon from discharge of capacitor across
electrodes
Plasma is then accelerated to generate thrust by Lorenz force that is established
by current and its induced magnetic field
PPT flown on both American and Soviet/Russian spacecraft since the 1960s
PPT was used to maintain fine pitch attitude control for NASA New Millennium
Program's Earth Observing-1 mission launched in 2000
16
Pulsed Plasma Thruster
More and more companies are beginning to use satellites with electric propulsion to extend the
operational life of satellites and reduce launch and operation costs. This produces savings that can
be passed along to consumers. NASA's primary application of ion propulsion will be for main
propulsion on long missions that are difficult or impossible to perform using other types of
propulsion.
The Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter (JIMO) spacecraft will use an array of high-power ion thrusters as main
propulsion. JIMO will perform an extensive exploration of Jupiter's icy moons Callisto, Ganymede,
and Europa. The spacecraft will investigate each moons composition, history, and potential for
sustaining life. Research in ion propulsion continues to push the envelope of propulsion technology.
Advancements are being made that allow the thrusters to operate at higher power levels, higher
speeds, and for longer durations. PPU and PMS technologies are being developed that will allow
NASA to build lighter and more compact systems while increasing reliability. As new power sources
become available, higher power thrusters will be developed that provide greater speed and more
thrust. Supporting technologies such as carbon-based ion optics and ECR discharges may greatly
increase ion thruster operational life, enabling longer duration missions or high-power IPS operation.
These technologies will allow humankind to explore the farthest reaches of our solar system.
References
EP offers much more substantial advantages over chemical systems, which extend
in several important cases to enabling missions that simply could not be
performed by means of any other reasonably projected propulsion technology.
These include heavy cargo and/or piloted missions to Mars and the outer planets
and many unpiloted probes beyond the solar system and out of the ecliptic plane.
The primary advantage of EP systems is the propellant mass economy, especially
for missions with a large velocity increment. Electric thrusters also offer secondary
benefits like precision and variability of the thrust, restart capabilities and long
total operational time. Their major disadvantages are the need for complicated
external power sources and the low thrust density levels.
This last characteristic strongly limits near-planet applications, complicates and
elongates orbit transfers, and makes launch and ascent/descent manoeuvres
unfeasible. EP is in fact fully exploited in the domain of interplanetary trips. It even
enables missions that simply could not be performed with chemical propulsion
THE END