A modified ECR plasma cathode operating on CO<sub>2</sub> in the presence of a Penning gas
ORAL
Abstract
Electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) plasma cathodes have the ability to operate on reactive molecular propellants, which can enable multi-mode operation by combining electric propulsion with chemical rockets systems using the same propellant. In this work, an ECR plasma cathode is operated on the molecular gas CO2. Previous testing with CO2 alone had discharge losses near 200 W/A, well above the target performance goal of under 100 W/A. This work investigates the addition of neon as a “Penning gas” to improve ionization efficiency via Penning Ionization. Here, the Penning gas essentially stores energy from electron excitation events in the form of excited neutrals, which have an enhanced reaction cross-section for ionization with CO2, as compared to that of standard electron-impact ionization events. ECR sources are capable of generating high energy electrons needed for the Penning effect. This experimental effort will employ a parametric study to identify operating conditions that maximize both device efficiency and quantity of extractable electrons, with a key parameter being the fraction of Penning gas required to make such an approach practical.
*The authors would like to thank the University of Michigan for providing the testing facility to conduct the experiments, as well as the following grants for funding this work: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) under Contract Nos. DE-AC02-09CH11466 & DE-SC0023325, NRL grant N00173-18-2-C009 and NSF Grant No. DGE-1841052
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Presenters
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Anil Bansal
- University of Michigan