A Performance Comparison of Xenon and Krypton Propellant on an SPT-100 Hall Thruster (Preprint)
Abstract
The use of krypton as an alternative to xenon for Hall thruster propellant is an interesting option for satellite system designers due to its lower cost. However, this cost-savings comes at the expense of thrust efficiency. Reduction in efficiency can be caused by energy losses from Joule heating, radiation, and the ionization process as well as degradation of plume quality from an increase in velocity distribution spread (most often from an increase in multiply charged ion populations) and geometric beam divergence.1 In order to quantify this performance reduction for the case of the flight model SPT-100 HET (1.35 kW), an ongoing series of experimental measurements is being conducted to measure how various thruster efficiency terms change with propellant and operating condition. This study will combine thrust measurements with plume data from electrostatic probes. This paper presents the results of performance measurements made using an inverted pendulum thrust stand. Krypton operating conditions were tested over a large range of operating powers from 800 W to 3.9 kW. Analysis of how performance is impacted by propellant and operating condition is presented. A simple mission analysis was done based on these measurements to evaluate the practicality of krypton propellant for an SPT-100 subsystem using krypton propellant for north-south station keeping (NSSK) for a typical communications spacecraft in geosynchronous orbit.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Aug 10, 2011
- Accession Number
- ADA549666
Entities
People
- Jorge J. Delgado
- Michael R. Nakles
- Ronald L. Corey
- William A. Hargus
Organizations
- Air Force Research Laboratory