Development of a High-Propellant Throughput Small Spacecraft Electric Propulsion System to Enable Lower Cost NASA Science Missions
Author(s) -
Gabriel Benavides,
Hani Kamhawi,
Thomas T. Liu,
Luis Pinero,
Timothy R. Sarver-Verhey,
Corey R. Rhodes,
John Yim,
Jon Mackey,
Timothy Gray,
Naia Butler-Craig,
James L. Myers,
A. G. Birchenough
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
aiaa propulsion and energy 2020 forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2019-4162
Subject(s) - propulsion , propellant , spacecraft , aerospace engineering , electrically powered spacecraft propulsion , throughput , ion thruster , spacecraft propulsion , aeronautics , in space propulsion technologies , engineering , automotive engineering , computer science , environmental science , systems engineering , astrobiology , physics , telecommunications , wireless
This paper describes recent progress at the NASA Glenn Research Center (GRC) in the development and demonstration of an integrated high-propellant throughput small spacecraft electric propulsion (HT-SSEP) system based on a Hall-effect thruster. A center-mounted cathode and an innovative magnetic circuit topology were implemented in the design of the Hall-effect thruster to achieve high-propellant throughput, high performance, and efficient packaging. To minimize technical risk, the HT-SSEP development approach sought to limit design features and materials to those with a clear path-to-flight. A propellant throughput capability of greater than 100 kg at a minimum thruster efficiency of 50% was targeted. The proof-of-concept NASA-H64M laboratory model (LM) thruster was designed, fabricated, and tested at GRC in fiscal year 2018. The thruster development leveraged heritage Hall-effect thruster design and manufacturing processes wherever appropriate. Recent NASA advances in Hall-effect thruster technology were also leveraged. A scalable discharge power supply (DPS) capable of powering the H64M-LM was developed, then demonstrated as part of an integrated system test. The DPS uses commercial off-the-shelf components with spaceflight equivalents. A keeper supply with DC ignitor was breadboarded, then demonstrated with a laboratory cathode. Finally, feed system trade studies were performed to ascertain what feed system architecture might be appropriate for an HT-SSEP system. This paper details the motivations for the project, the development approach, the chosen sub-system architectures, design considerations, and test results.
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