Methodology and Historical Perspective of a Hall Thruster Efficiency Analysis
Abstract
A Hall thruster performance architecture was developed based on separation of the total thrust directed along thruster centerline into mass weighted and momentum-weighted terms. With this formulation, the anode thrust efficiency equation was analytically decomposed to explicitly account for the effects of energy conversion losses, plume divergence, and the velocity distribution function of the propellant jet. Thruster efficiency is defined as the product of (1) energy efficiency, (2) propellant efficiency, and (3) beam efficiency. Energy efficiency comprises losses due to ionization processes and losses that manifest as Joule heating of the thruster, and contains no information about the vector properties of the jet. Propellant efficiency incorporates losses from dispersion in the jet composition, and is unity for 100% ionization to a single ion species. The effect of neutrals on dispersion of the jet VDF in propellant efficiency is introduced in the neutral-gain utilization. The beam efficiency accounts for divergence of the jet, and is ideal when the ion velocity vectors are parallel to the thrust axis. Plume divergence is defined as a momentum-weighted term, and the approximation as a charge-weighted term is characterized. The efficiency architecture is derived from first principles and is applicable to all propulsion employing electrostatic acceleration, including Hall thrusters and ion engines. Similarities and distinctions to several past methodologies are discussed, including past ion engine analyses, early Russian performance studies, and contemporary architectures. Thrust and far-field plume measurements of a 6 kW laboratory Hall thruster are used to study the analysis capability in characterizing performance loss mechanisms.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jan 26, 2009
- Accession Number
- ADA505275
Entities
People
- Alec D. Gallimore
- Brian E. Beal
- Carl William Larson
- Daniel L. Brown
Organizations
- Air Force Research Laboratory