Abstract

Conventional annular Hall thrusters become inefficient when scaled to low power. Cylindrical Hall thrusters, which have lower surface-to-volume ratio, are more promising for scaling down. They presently exhibit performance comparable with conventional annular Hall thrusters. The present paper gives a review of the experimental and numerical investigations of electron cross-field transport in the 2.6-cm miniaturized cylindrical Hall thruster (100-W power level). We show that, in order to explain the discharge current observed for the typical operating conditions, the electron anomalous collision frequency /spl nu//sub B/ has to be on the order of the Bohm value, /spl nu//sub B/ /spl ap/ /spl omega//sub c//16. The contribution of electron-wall collisions to cross-field transport is found to be insignificant. The optimal regimes of thruster operation at low background pressure (below 10/sup -5/ torr) in the vacuum tank appear to be different from those at higher pressure (/spl sim/10/sup -4/ torr).

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