HIGH-EFFICIENCY ION DISCHARGE METHOD AND APPARATUS
20200072200 ยท 2020-03-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01J37/32422
ELECTRICITY
H05H1/46
ELECTRICITY
H01J27/14
ELECTRICITY
C25B11/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F03H1/0037
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F03H1/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An ion beam generator includes a discharge chamber with a backplate and tubular sidewalk A source of propellant, for example, Xenon gas is provided to the discharge chamber. First and second annular magnets are disposed on or near the backplate, and configured with alternating polarities such that a pair of ring-cusps form on the backplate, without any magnetic ring-cusp formation on the sidewalk A cathode assembly extends into the discharge chamber to provide primary electrons to ionize the propellant.
Claims
1. An ion beam generator comprising: a discharge chamber having a first end and an outflow end, the discharge chamber comprising a backplate at the first end and a tubular sidewall; a source of propellant connected to provide propellant to the discharge chamber; a first annular magnet and a second annular magnet, wherein the first and second annular magnets each have a first pole face adjacent to or narrowly spaced from the backplate and an opposite pole face oriented away from the backplate, and wherein the first and second annular magnets are configured with opposing polarity such that they generate a magnetic field in the discharge chamber defining at least two ring-cusps at the backplate; a cathode assembly extending into the discharge chamber and configured to provide primary electrons to the discharge chamber; and an extraction grid disposed at the outflow end of the discharge chamber; wherein the ion beam generator does not include any magnet configured to form a magnetic ring-cusp at the sidewall.
2. The ion beam generator of claim 1, wherein the sidewall is insulated from the backplate.
3. The ion beam generator of claim 1, wherein the first and second annular magnets each comprise either a continuous annular magnet or a discontinuous annular magnet comprising a plurality of spaced-apart magnets.
4. The ion beam generator of claim 1, wherein the first and second annular magnets are spaced from the backplate.
5. The ion beam generator of claim 1, wherein the first and second annular magnets comprise rare-earth magnets or electromagnets.
6. The ion beam generator of claim 1, wherein the first and second annular magnets are coaxial.
7. The ion beam generator of claim 6, further comprising a third annular magnet coaxial with the first and second annular magnets and disposed adjacent to or narrowly spaced from the backplate, wherein the first, second, and third annular magnets are configured to generate a magnetic field extending into the discharge chamber and defining at least three magnetic ring-cusps at the backplate.
8. The ion beam generator of claim 1, wherein the first and second annular magnets are fixed to a surface of the backplate.
9. The ion beam generator of claim 1, wherein the backplate is frustoconical.
10. The ion beam generator of claim 9, wherein the first pole face of at least one of the first and second annular magnets is frustoconical and parallel with the frustoconical backplate.
11. The ion beam generator of claim 1, wherein at least one of the first and second annular magnets is canted.
12. The ion beam generator of claim 1, further comprising an annular electrode disposed in the discharge chamber and insulated from the backplate.
13. The ion beam generator of claim 12, wherein the annular electrode is configured to be biased to a controllable bias voltage.
14. The ion beam generator of claim 1, wherein the backplate comprises a plurality of apertures providing flow paths for propellant into the discharge chamber.
15. The ion beam generator of claim 14, further comprising a propellant plenum disposed opposite the discharge chamber, and configured to provide propellant to the plurality of apertures.
16. The ion beam generator of claim 1, further comprising an annular trim electromagnet disposed around the tubular sidewall.
17. An ion thruster comprising: a discharge chamber having a first end and an outflow end, the discharge chamber comprising a backplate at the first end and a tubular sidewall; a source of propellant connected to provide propellant to the discharge chamber; a first annular magnet and a second annular magnet, wherein the first and second annular magnets each have a first pole face adjacent to or narrowly spaced from the backplate and an opposite pole face oriented directly away from the backplate, and wherein the first and second annular magnets are configured with opposing polarity such that they generate a magnetic field in the discharge chamber defining at least two ring-cusps at the backplate; an annular electrode disposed in the discharge chamber and insulated from the backplate; a cathode assembly extending into the discharge chamber and configured to provide primary electrons to the discharge chamber; and an extraction grid assembly disposed at the outflow end of the discharge chamber; wherein the ion beam generator does not include any magnet configured to form a magnetic ring-cusp at the sidewall.
18. The ion thruster of claim 17, wherein the first and second annular magnets comprise coaxial rare-earth magnets.
19. The ion thruster of claim 18, further comprising a third annular magnet coaxial with the first and second annular magnets and disposed adjacent to or narrowly spaced from the backplate, wherein the first, second, and third annular magnets are configured to generate a magnetic field extending into the discharge chamber and defining at least three magnetic ring-cusps at the backplate.
20. The ion thruster of claim 17, wherein the backplate is frustoconical.
21. The ion thruster of claim 17, wherein the first pole face of at least one of the first and second annular magnets is frustoconical and parallel with the frustoconical backplate.
22. The ion thruster of claim 17, wherein at least one of the first and second annular magnets is canted.
23. The ion thruster of claim 17, further comprising an annular trim electromagnet disposed around the tubular sidewall.
24. An ion beam generator comprising: a discharge chamber having a first end and an outflow end, the discharge chamber comprising a backplate at the first end and a tubular sidewall; a source of propellant connected to provide propellant to the discharge chamber; a first annular magnet configured with one pole face adjacent to or narrowly spaced from the backplate and an opposite pole face facing away from the backplate such that the first annular magnet generates a magnetic field in the discharge chamber defining a ring-cusp at the backplate; a cathode assembly extending into the discharge chamber and configured to provide primary electrons to the discharge chamber; and an extraction grid disposed at the outflow end of the discharge chamber; wherein the ion beam generator does not include any magnet configured to form a magnetic ring-cusp along the sidewall.
25. The ion beam generator of claim 24, wherein the sidewall is insulated from the backplate.
26. The ion beam generator of claim 24, wherein the first annular magnet comprises either a continuous annular magnet or a discontinuous annular magnet comprising a plurality of spaced-apart magnets.
27. The ion beam generator of claim 24, wherein the first annular magnet is spaced from the backplate.
28. The ion beam generator of claim 24, wherein the first annular magnet comprises a rare-earth magnet.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0038] The foregoing aspects and many of the attendant advantages of this invention will become more readily appreciated as the same become better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0046] According to an embodiment of the technology, a miniature direct-current ion beam generator is disclosed with a magnetic field design with improved discharge and mass utilization efficiency. The disclosed device is referred to as an Axial Ring-Cusp Hybrid (ARCH) discharge device. The ARCH technology provides an efficient mN-class and mA-class thruster/ion-source, with applications to space thrusters as well as terrestrial ion beam applications.
[0047] An important aspect of the ARCH technology is a magnetic field topology that reduces high energy (primary) electron loss to the chamber walls while maintaining a desirable beam profile. The design also prevents or reduces the loss of lower energy plasma electrons and ions to the walls, and loss of unionized neutral atoms and molecules through the grids. In some embodiments the ARCH ion beam generator includes tunable magnetic fields, a magnetic field structure with field lines generally aligned with a sidewall anode surface to independently collect plasma electrons to sustain a stable discharge current, and a chamber design that produces high ion beam output with reduced thermal loading of the discharge body, magnets, and other sensitive components. The design approach is highly scalable to lower and higher power and grid diameter.
[0048]
[0049] In this embodiment the ion beam generator 100 includes a discharge chamber 110 and a propellant plenum 130 adjacent to the discharge chamber 110. The cathode assembly 105 is centrally mounted, and extends through the propellant plenum 130 and into the discharge chamber 110. A mounting ring 120 for attaching the grid assembly (not shown) is provided at an outflow end of the discharge chamber 110.
[0050] The propellant plenum 130 includes a plenum backplate 132 and a plenum sidewall 134. Apertures or inlet ports 136 in the backplate 132 are configured to connect with a source of propellant, for example, a reservoir of xenon gas or other propellant system (not shown) for actively or passively providing propellant to the plenum 130. For example, propellant may be provided at a prescribed flow rate. In this embodiment the propellant plenum 130 houses a magnet system 140 including two or more spaced concentric annular magnets 142, 144. The annular magnets 142, 144 may be any suitable type of magnet, as are well known in the art, including permanent magnets or electromagnets. For example, in a current embodiment the annular magnets 142, 144 are rare-earth samarium-cobalt permanent magnets.
[0051] The annular magnets 142, 144 are magnetized in the axial direction with a north pole face oppositely disposed from a corresponding south pole face. The annular magnets 142, 144 are configured to have opposing or alternating polarities (as indicated with N and S in
[0052] Although in this embodiment the magnet system 140 is disposed outside of the discharge chamber 110, in other embodiments (not shown) the annular magnets may alternatively be positioned on or above an upper surface of a discharge chamber 110 backplate 112, e.g., inside the discharge chamber 110, and in other embodiments the magnet system 140 may be recessed or encased in a backplate 112 of the discharge chamber 110.
[0053] The discharge chamber 110 includes the discharge backplate 112 that in this embodiment also defines an end plate of the propellant plenum 130, and a tubular sidewall 114 that extends from the backplate 112. The backplate 112 includes one or more ports 118 between the propellant plenum 130 and the discharge chamber 110, permitting a flow of propellant into the discharge chamber 110. A center aperture 122 in the backplate 112 is sized to receive an end of the cathode assembly 105 therethrough and has a transverse dimension larger than the end of the cathode assembly 105 such that an insulating gap is defined between the cathode assembly 105 and the backplate 112. The insulating gap 122 may be open to permit propellant to enter the discharge chamber 110 from the plenum 130, or may be partially or fully blocked.
[0054] Although the backplate 112 in this embodiment is a flat plate, it is contemplated that the backplate may be shaped, for example, the backplate may be frustoconical or have a frustoconical or domed portion.
[0055] The inflow end of the sidewall 114 includes a flange 113 that engages the backplate 112. An annular bracket 124 is positioned to engage the flange 113, and configured to clamp the sidewall 114 to the corresponding backplate 112. In the disclosed embodiment the plenum sidewall 134, a radially outer portion of the backplate 112, and the annular bracket 124 include apertures 135, 115, 125 that are aligned and configured to receive attachment hardware therethrough (not shown) to attach the discharge chamber 110 to the propellant plenum 130. In other embodiments propellant may be provided directly to the discharge chamber 110 without a plenum, or may be provided through a plenum spaced apart from the discharge chamber.
[0056] In this embodiment, and as seen most clearly in
[0057] A novel aspect of the ion beam generator 100 is that the two or more axially polarized (i.e., polarized in the vertical direction in
[0058] In an exemplary embodiment the ion beam generator 100 has a discharge chamber 110 with a diameter of less than 5 cm, for example, 3 cm, and is designed to operate between about 20 W to about 100 W of total power. In an exemplary embodiment the magnetic field topology is produced with concentric samarium cobalt ring magnets 142, 144, though other magnet materials or electromagnets may alternatively be used for all or some of the magnetic field sources. The magnets 142, 144 are axially magnetized (i.e., parallel to the center axis of the discharge chamber 110) and placed in alternating polarity producing two ring-cusps that terminate onto the backplate 112. The magnets 142, 144 engage the magnetic pole piece 141 and are radially spaced, with a gap between the first magnet 142 and the second magnet 144. In this embodiment the magnets 142, 144 are also spaced away from the backplate 112, to minimize thermal loads on the magnets 142, 144. The anode sidewall 114 is electrically and thermally insulated from the backplate 112 and maintained at an anode potential. The insulator panels 116, 177 in this embodiment are ceramic washers.
[0059] Neutral propellant gas (for example, xenon) enters the discharge chamber 110 through the cathode opening 122 and/or ports 118, and/or the cathode assembly and orifice 105. Other means for introducing the propellant gas are known in the art, and may alternatively be used. In one embodiment, the cathode assembly 105 includes a thermionic filament and is installed with the primary electron flow substantially coplanar with the backplate 112. The filament cathode 105 may be a hollow cathode (as shown) to increase lifetime and reduce discharge heating. In some embodiments a magnetic field is provided one or more trim coil electromagnets 250 wrapped directly around the sidewall 114 (see, for example,
[0060] The magnetic field may be produced by electromagnets or permanent magnets. Tunable electromagnets and/or or moveable or thermal modifiable permanent magnets may be used to change the magnetic field inside the discharge chamber to allow modification to the performance or behavior of the discharge. For example, the magnets may be tuned to operate in a higher efficiency mode with regards to power or propellant efficiency. Also, the magnets may be used to tune the discharge magnetic field to create a lossy plasma discharge that improves plasma stability and allows for greater throttleability. Such tuning may also be used to provide greater beam flatness, which can improve life and may or may not improve efficiency, depending on the desired performance criteria for the device and application.
[0061] In some embodiments an extraction grid system 111 (see
[0062] In a current embodiment, the height of the chamber is designed such that the magnetic fields are approximately 10 G to 30 G along the extraction plane. However, different aspect ratio can be used depending on beam and ion content desired. The inner and outer ring-cusps are typically sized so that the apogee of the cusp is between the radial location of the anode and cathode. Different B-fields can be achieved via trim coils or electromagnetic options. The outer cusp is preferably placed sufficiently outwards for a wider profile to avoid the ring-cusp structure from bowing outwards to make substantial contact with the anode sidewall 114.
[0063] Refer now also to
[0064] The discharge chamber sidewall 114 is maintained at an anode potential 92, and is insulated from the backplate 112, which is maintained at or below the cathode potential 90. The magnetic field lines B from the alternating polarity annular magnets 142, 144 extend into the discharge chamber 110, forming spaced-apart ring-cusps with magnetic field lines approximately perpendicular to the backplate 112. In particular, there is no ring-cusp region on the sidewall 114. Primary electrons (indicated as e in
[0065] A portion of the propellant gas g entering the discharge chamber 110 becomes ionized by the primary electrons e, and the diffusive plasma electrons are substantially collected at the anode potential sidewall 114. Therefore, heating of the discharge chamber 110 is substantially concentrated in the sidewall 114, which is thermally isolated from the backplate 112 and the magnets 142, 144 by insulator 116.
[0066] The weaker axial magnetic fields allow discharge current to be maintained at relatively low discharge voltages. Increasing plasma density increases diffusivity which allows for higher discharge currents.
[0067] An electrode 119 can be used to increase discharge efficiency. For example, the electrode 119 can be allowed to float relative to the plasma, which will increase its potential in order to confine ions. The electrodes 119 may be actively biased to further improve ion confinement, or alternatively be used to partially shield the primary electrons e from the cathode potential of the backplate 112, improving the efficiency of the primary electrons and preventing or reducing the heat load on the backplate 112. The electrodes 119 may be sized (for example, heuristically) to minimize the number of primary electrons e impacting the backplate 112.
[0068] Prior art ion beam generators generate ring-cusps on the cylindrical sidewall, generating strong radial gradients that are generally undesirable. Positioning the magnets 142, 144 only on or at the backplate 112 generates a magnetic field that decreases in strength axially through the discharge chamber 110 towards the accelerator grid assembly 111, which has the advantage of producing improved ion beam flatness. The magnetic field lines diverge from the centerline and along the extraction plane for even and efficient plasma generation.
[0069] Placement of the alternating polarity annular magnets 142, 144 on the backplate 112 produces a magnetic field B with magnetic cusps on the back surface of the discharge chamber 110, and regions in the discharge chamber with field lines that are substantially vertical in a large portion of the discharge chamber 110. The magnetic field B is therefore fundamentally different from conventional ion beam sources (see, for example, Sovey et al.) wherein the magnetic field lines are substantially horizontal forming ring-cusps on the sidewall. Also the backplate 112 in this embodiment is at a cathode potential, and the anode potential is at the sidewall 114, disposed relatively far from the cathode assembly 105. The discharge chamber 110 geometry and the magnetic field B combine to reduce the loss of primary electrons generated by the cathode assembly 105 from being lost to the anode sidewall 114. Although in currently preferred embodiments the backplate 112 is at a cathode potential and insulated from the sidewall 114, in other embodiments the sidewall is directly connected with the backplate, and they are both at an anode potential. In such an embodiment, the electron confinement at the cusp can be augmented by an optional annular electrode (not shown) located at one or more cusps that can be biased to a lower potential.
[0070] A propellant source 170 comprising a reservoir of propellant 172 provides propellant to the discharge chamber 110. The flow rate of propellant may be adjusted, for example, to achieve desired ion beam properties. For example, the flow rate of the propellant may be adjusted with a controller 174, such as an electronic processor, which may receive sensor data from one or more sensors 176 along the propellant line (not shown), in the discharge chamber 110, in the grid system 111, in the outflow ion beam, or the like, and use the received data to control the flow of propellant to the discharge chamber 110.
[0071] It will be appreciated by persons of skill in the art, based on the teachings herein, that in very small diameter ion beam generators 100 it may be preferable to include only one of the first and second annular magnets 142, 144 at or below the backplate 112 to generate a single magnetic ring-cusp at the backplate 112.
[0072]
[0073] In this embodiment, three annular magnets 242, 244, 246 are disposed with alternating polarity on, in, or below the backplate 112 of the discharge chamber 110. Such an embodiment may also employ more than three annular magnet arrangements. As with the previously described ion beam generator 100, the sidewall 114 is insulated from the backplate 112, and provides a cylindrical anode surface. One or more segmented annular floating electrodes 219 are optionally disposed on the backplate 112 with corresponding insulators 221 between the electrodes 219 and the backplate 112. Magnetic ring-cusps are produced at the backplate 112, for example, between and outboard of the electrodes 219, as indicated by the magnetic field lines B. Although in this embodiment the ring-cusps are produced at the backplate 112 between the electrodes 219, in other embodiments, more than two electrodes may be provided, and the electrodes may be configured to generally overlie the magnets 242, 244, 246, such that the ring cusps are formed at the electrode.
[0074] Primary electrons e from the cathode assembly 105 are emitted at the center of the inner annular ring-cusp, which reduces loss of the primary electrons e to the anode sidewall 114, allowing the primary electrons to more effectively ionize the propellant gas g. Optionally, a controllable electromagnetic coil 250 located around the sidewall 114, or located behind the backplate 112, is configured to act as trim coils, and may be operated to fine-tune plasma electron confinement.
[0075] It is contemplated that in other embodiments more than three annular magnets may be disposed with alternating polarity on, in, or below the backplate 112 of the discharge chamber 110.
[0076]
[0077]
[0078] The frustoconical backplate 412 (at a cathode potential) allows the sidewall 414 (at an anode potential) to be relatively smaller, for the same enclosed volume. The smaller anode area results in potentially fewer primary electrons e loss to the sidewall 414, and increases the effectiveness of the primary electrons e in ionizing the propellant gas g. Such a configuration would be attractive for increased overall thruster diameters, and therefore could employ more than two annular arrangements of magnets along the backplate 412.
[0079] Although in
[0080] The disclosed ion beam generator design is easily amenable to miniaturization to sub-centimeter designs, and up to 10 cm configurations. For larger configurations, a repeating array of backplate magnets would accommodate ion beam generators having a diameter greater than 10 cm.
[0081] A current embodiment of a 3 cm ARCH discharge device achieves a total efficiency of 74%, a propellant efficiency of 92%, and a beam current of 60 mA for the same grid diameter and discharge power as the well-known MIXI thruster that uses a conventional ring-cusp geometry. Due to improved primary confinement, this translates to a discharge loss of 245 eV/ion and electrical efficiency of 82%, a considerable improvement compared to conventional ring-cusp design.
[0082] Compared to available specifications for the Kaufman ion sources such as the KRI KDC40, the ARCH discharge can produce similar beam currents at 10 mA/cm2 but at discharge voltage of 25 V instead of the reported 100 V.
[0083] Traditional ring-cusp design principles have inherent design limitations at the miniature scale because their field structure dominates the bulk discharge. A radially magnetized ring magnet around the chamber walls generates strong magnetic field and density gradients along the radial direction, which generally leads to poor beam flatness and poor overall performance. Therefore, the overall magnetic fields must be limited to configurations that would precisely align the cusp structure along the extraction plane. In addition, high-energy primary electrons and lower-energy plasma electrons are lost relatively prodigiously to the cusp leak area. The total cusp leak area must be adequate to extract a stable discharge current which leads to excessive loss of primary electrons.
[0084] The ARCH discharge differs from conventional thruster designs due to its highly unique field topology and its unprecedented performance for its scale. The ARCH discharge addresses the key obstacles with traditional ring-cusp design: primary electron confinement and beam uniformity. As shown in the attached figure, the magnetic cusps are axially aligned and in a concentric pattern along the rear plate. The rear plate can be adjusted over a wide range of potentials to maximize performance (typically near cathode potential), while the anode voltage, relative to the electron emitting cathode, is applied to the cylindrical walls. This geometry maintains a strong cusp but with the field gradient along the axial direction towards the extraction plane. Therefore, the design exhibits a topology with uniformly low magnetic fields along the entire grid plane, resulting in good beam flatness. In addition, due to the magnetic field geometry and the rear plate bias, there is no directly exposed cusp to anode potential. This significantly increases the confinement of the high-value primary electrons (which provide the energy to generate the discharge) while the plasma electrons that result from ionization collisions are sufficiently lossy to prevent discharge impedance shift instabilities. Lastly, since most or all of the discharge current can be collected at the cylindrical walls, which can be insulated from the rear plate. This allows the ARCH discharge to operate at higher discharge currents and plasma densities without the risk of overheating the magnets.
[0085] The ARCH discharge design is an ideal candidate as an ion source for miniature ion thruster for space propulsion applications. Similarly, it is well-suited for ion beam etching with plasma processing, particularly in nano-fabrication. Both of these applications still employ traditional ring-cusp and Kaufman-type discharge chambers for DC plasma generation.
[0086] Regarding space missions, highly efficient miniature ion thrusters that are enabled by the ARCH discharge are a key enabling technology for future missions for microsatellites and larger satellites. Recently, miniature spacecraft technologies and approaches have increased the capabilities and science return that can be delivered by microsatellites, thus greatly increasing the need for efficient miniature ion thrusters. The ARCH discharge enables efficient miniature ion thrusters that offer an important and unique capability for mission and spacecraft designers since they are capable of delivering desirable thrust levels (in the mN range), thrust control, propellant efficiency (Isp 1500 to 4000 s), and high mission delta-V (which is a measure of the effective total mission capability provided by a thruster). By reducing the power consumption and inert mass of the propulsion system, this invention can enable missions for microsatellites (10-100 kg) or smaller craft for missions that were once unachievable for such small vehicles. Larger spacecraft (>100 kg) are increasingly implementing electric propulsion and would benefit greatly from the ability to use these highly efficient miniature thruster for both primary and secondary propulsion, which can be applied to all mission classes. These mission classes include: Earth-orbiting, exploration, space and terrestrial planet observatories, space tugs, and formation flying.
[0087] While illustrative embodiments have been illustrated and described, it will be appreciated that various changes can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.