Abstract

The performance of an electron cyclotron resonance thruster is analyzed for operation with argon, krypton, xenon, and water vapor to understand how mass utilization efficiency and frozen flow losses vary across propellant type. The device was operated from 20 to 220 W for flow rates of 0.06–0.4 mg/s. Thrust performance is measured using an inverted pendulum thrust stand, and plasma characteristics are measured using a retarding potential analyzer, ExB probe, Langmuir probe, and emissive probe. Specific impulse is generally found to decrease as the ratio of mass flow rate over power () increases. Probe measurements indicate that this trend is attributed to a combination of lower propellant mass utilization and decreased electron temperatures. The mass utilization efficiency is found to increase with the ratio of thruster length to ionization mean free path for all propellants; however, the data do not support existing theoretical scaling laws, and a more accurate empirical scaling law is proposed. The decrease in electron temperature with also drives an increase in the relative frozen flow losses, which are found to be about a factor of two higher for water propellant. Multiply charged ions did not constitute a significant fraction of the plume for the atomic species. Mass utilization efficiency and frozen flow losses describe the trends in the thrust efficiency but not the overall magnitude, which suggests that microwave coupling and diffusion to the walls are dominant loss processes.

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