Plasma Dynamics and Electron Transport in a Hall-Thruster-Representative Configuration with Various Propellants: I—Variations with Discharge Voltage and Current Density

Author:

Reza Maryam1ORCID,Faraji Farbod1ORCID,Knoll Aaron1

Affiliation:

1. Plasma Propulsion Laboratory, Department of Aeronautics, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK

Abstract

The results from a wide-ranging parametric investigation into the behavior of the collisionless partially magnetized plasma discharge of three propellants—xenon, krypton, and argon—are reported in this two-part article. These studies are performed using high-fidelity reduced-order particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations in a 2D configuration that represents an axial–azimuthal cross-section of a Hall thruster. In this part I paper, we discuss the effects of discharge voltage and current density (mass flow rate). Our parametric studies assess the spectra of the resolved instabilities under various plasma conditions. We evaluate the ability of the relevant theories from the literature to explain the variations in the instabilities’ characteristics across the studied plasma parameter space and for various propellants. Moreover, we investigate the changes in the electrons’ cross-magnetic-field transport, as well as the significance of the contribution of different momentum terms to this phenomenon across the analyzed cases. In terms of salient observations, the ion acoustic instability (IAI)-related modes are found to be dominant across the simulation cases, with the ion transit time instability also seen to develop at low current density values. Across the explored parameter space, the instabilities have the main contributions to the electrons’ transport within the plume region. The peak of the electric momentum force term, representing the effect of the instabilities, overall shifts toward the plume as either the current density or the discharge voltage increases. The numerical findings are compared against relevant experimental observations reported in the literature.

Funder

European Commission’s Horizon 2020 programme

Imperial College London Open Access Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

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