Ion thruster

An ion engine test
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An ion engine test

An ion thruster is one of several types of spacecraft propulsion that uses beams of ions for propulsion. The precise method for accelerating the ions may vary, but all designs take advantage of the high charge-to-mass ratio of ions to accelerate them to very high velocities. Ion thrusters are therefore able to achieve high specific impulse, reducing the amount of reaction mass required but increasing the amount of power required compared to chemical rockets. Ion thrusters can deliver performance approximately one order of magnitude greater fuel efficiency than traditional liquid fuel rocket engines but they are generally constrained to very low thrusts by the available power.

Contents

Types of ion thruster

There are many types of ion thruster currently in development; some are currently in use, while others have not yet been installed in spacecraft. Some of the types of ion thruster are:

Other forms of high-efficiency electric thruster have also been proposed; see spacecraft propulsion.

General design

In the simplest design, an electrostatic ion thruster, ions are accelerated by passing them through highly-charged grids (similar in concept to a vacuum tube). Opposite charged ions are also fired into the ion beam and accelerated through the grid as they leave the thruster. This keeps the spacecraft and the thruster beams neutral electrically. The acceleration uses up very little reaction mass (i.e., the specific impulse, or Isp, is very high).

Energy usage

A major consideration is the amount of energy or power required to run the engine, partly to ionize the materials, but most especially to accelerate the ions to the extremely high speeds required to have any useful effect. Exhaust speeds of 30 km/s are not uncommon, which is far faster than the 3-4.5 km/s for chemical rockets, and makes for notably low propellent usage.

With ion thrusters, most of the energy is lost in the high speed exhaust and this affects the thrust levels. It turns out that the overall thrust obtained from a given amount of energy is inversely proportional to exhaust speed (since energy consumption per kilogram of propellant is proportional to exhaust velocity squared, but the thrust per kilogram of propellant is only proportional to exhaust speed—see [1]).

Thrust

In practice, with currently practical energy sources of perhaps a few tens of kilowatts, and given a not untypical Isp of 3000 seconds (30 kN·s/kg), ion thrusters give only extremely modest forces (often tenths of a newton). With the weight of the energy sources and vehicle of hundreds of kilogram, the accelerations are typically ~milligee (10 mm/s²).

Since thrust goes down with higher specific impulse, as specific impulse increases, a mission takes longer to achieve and this can incur additional costs. Since many missions are attempting to minimise costs, some of which increase with the length of the mission, an optimum specific impulse can be calculated.

Lifespan

Given the low thrust, the life of the thruster becomes important. Ion drives have to be kept running a large part of the time to allow the milli-gee acceleration to build up into something meaningful. In the simplest design of engine, an electrostatic ion thruster, the ions often hit the grids on their way through the engine, which leads to the decay of the grids and their eventual failure. Smaller grids lower the chance of these accidental collisions, but decrease the amount of charge they can handle, and thus lower the thrust.

Missions

Of all the electric thrusters, ion engines have been the most seriously considered commercially and academically in the quest for interplanetary missions. Ion engines are seen as the best solution for these missions as interplanetary trajectories require very high ΔV (the overall change in velocity, taken as a single value) that can be built up over long periods of time (years).

The Hall effect thruster is a type of ion thruster that has been used for decades for station keeping by the Soviet-Union and is now also applied in the West: the European Space Agency's satellite Smart 1 uses it.

Missing image
Xenon-ion-engine.jpg
A NASA xenon ion engine test

NASA has developed an ion engine called NSTAR for use in their interplanetary missions. This engine was tested in the highly successful space probe Deep Space 1. Hughes has developed the XIPS (Xenon Ion Propulsion System) for performing stationkeeping on geosynchronous satellites. These are electrostatic ion thrusters and work by a different principle than Hall effect thrusters.

In 2003 NASA ground-tested a new version of their ion engine called High Power Electric Propulsion, or HiPEP. The HiPEP engine differs from earlier ion engines because the xenon ions are produced using a combination of microwaves and spinning magnets. Previously the electrons required were provided by a cathode. Using microwaves significantly reduces the wear and tear on the engine by avoiding any contact between the speeding ions and the electron source.

Most other electric spacecraft engine designs are based on the same principles, but attempt to avoid the grid degradation problem with a combination of other electric or magnetic fields.

Other fuels have been considered for use with ion propulsion. Research has been invested in fullerenes for this purpose, specifically C60 (buckminsterfullerene), due in part to its large electron-impact cross section. This property gives the potential for ion engines with higher efficiency than current Xenon-based designs at Isp values of less than 3,000 lbf·s/lb (29 kN·s/kg).

JP Aerospace has been working to build an orbital airship, which uses a combination of a balloon and ion thrusters to achieve orbit without any use of conventional rockets, for roughly one dollar per short ton per mile of altitude ($0.70/(t·km)).

Ion thrusters in fiction

  • Film creator and director George Lucas seems to have some confidence in ion propulsion: in the Star Wars movies, the technologically sophisticated Empire's TIE Fighters get their name from the TIEs used for propulsion — Twin Ion Engines...
  • Arthur C. Clarke's 1949 short story Breaking Strain features a cargo ship with an ion drive powered by "Atomic motors".
  • In Star Trek, The engineer of the USS Enterprise, Scotty, says: "Captain, they're using an ion drive on that ship! I bet they could teach us a thing or two".

References

[1] the energy computed from the rocket equation

See also

External link

de:Ionenantrieb fr:Moteur ionique nl:Ionenmotor ja:イオンエンジン pl:Silnik jonowy sl:Ionski pogon ru:Ионный двигатель

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