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Mercury ion thruster technologyThe Mercury Ion Thruster Technology program was an investigation for improving the understanding of state-of-the-art mercury ion thrusters. Emphasis was placed on optimizing the performance and simplifying the design of the 30 cm diameter ring-cusp discharge chamber. Thruster performance was improved considerably; the baseline beam-ion production cost of the optimized configuration was reduced to Epsilon (sub i) perspective to 130 eV/ion. At a discharge propellant-utilization efficiency of 95 percent, the beam-ion production cost was reduced to about 155 eV/ion, representing a reduction of about 40 eV/ion over the corresponding value for the 30 cm diameter J-series thruster. Comprehensive Langmuir-probe surveys were obtained and compared with similar measurements for a J-series thruster. A successful volume-averaging scheme was developed to correlate thruster performance with the dominant plasma processes that prevail in the two thruster designs. The average Maxwellian electron temperature in the optimized ring-cusp design is as much as 1 eV higher than it is in the J-series thruster. Advances in ion-extraction electrode fabrication technology were made by improving materials selection criteria, hydroforming and stress-relieving tooling, and fabrications procedures. An ion-extraction performance study was conducted to assess the effect of screen aperture size on ion-optics performance and to verify the effectiveness of a beam-vectoring model for three-grid ion optics. An assessment of the technology readiness of the J-series thruster was completed, and operation of an 8 cm IAPS thruster using a simplified power processor was demonstrated.
Document ID
19890012463
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Beattie, J. R.
(Hughes Research Labs. Malibu, CA, United States)
Matossian, J. N.
(Hughes Research Labs. Malibu, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 5, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 1989
Subject Category
Spacecraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-174974
NAS 1.26:174974
Accession Number
89N21834
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS3-23775
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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