Interactions of Electric Propulsion Plumes With a Complete Spacecraft

Abstract

The objective of this Grant was the development of computational tools to analyze the interactions of Electric Propulsion thrusters with complex structures, such as complete Spacecraft, spacecraft in a vacuum tank, or a neighboring formation-flying spacecraft. This entailed substantial extensions and refinements of previous 3D Hybrid PIC code, including adoption of an unstructured tetrahedral grid, mating of this grid to surface grids generated by commercial solid modeling software, integration into the AFRL COLISEUM architecture, allowance for non-quasineutral regions due to obstacles in the plume, streamlining of the collisional operators (no-counter DSMC, MCC option) and allowance of a non-constant electron temperature. Several verifications were run against laboratory data, including plume surveys in our Laboratory of the BHT-200 thruster and a shield-wake experiment of J. Pollard using the larger PPL-90 thruster. This Report summarizes these accomplishments, mainly by reference to the several papers and Theses that were generated, copies of which are attached as a CD.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jul 22, 2005
Accession Number
ADA438578

Entities

People

  • Daniel E. Hastings
  • Jaime Peraire
  • Manuel Martinez-sanchez

Organizations

  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms
  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force
  • Buildings And Structures
  • Collisions
  • Current Density
  • Department Of Defense
  • Electric Propulsion
  • Engines
  • Experimental Data
  • Governments
  • Information Operations
  • Leading Edges
  • Massachusetts
  • Measurement
  • National Governments
  • Research Facilities
  • Simulations
  • Trajectories

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Aerospace Propulsion Engineering.
  • Finite Element Method (FEM) for solving Partial Differential Equations (PDEs)
  • Systems Analysis and Design

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics
  • Space
  • Space - Hall-Effect Thruster