16.522, Space Propulsion
Prof. Manuel Martinez-Sanchez
Lecture 17: NOTES ON HALL THRUSTERS
NOTES ON HALL THRUSTERS
1. Introduction
Hall thrusters are electrostatic ion accelerators in which the grid system (which
serves in classical ion engines to anchor the negative charges used to accelerate the
ions) is replaced with a relatively strong magnetic field perpendicular to the flow.
This magnetic field impedes the counterflow of electrons in the accelerating field,
and, as will be shown, does away with the space-charge limitation which restricts the
flow and thrust of ion engines.
Hall thrusters have had a curious and long history. Discovered in the early 1960’s in
the U.S.
(1)
, and possibly independently in the USSR
(2)
, they were later abandoned in
the West when it became apparent that there were strong instabilities which could
not be completely eliminated, and when some additional work in Germany
(3)
indicated higher effective plasma collisionality than had been expected. Contributing
to the demise was the simultaneous successful development of gridded ion engines
of the Kaufmann type, which appeared to satisfy most high ?V mission equirements
then envisioned, and the promise of efficient hydrogen arcjets for the low and
intermediate ?V ranges. It later developed that many important missions optimize
in the Isp range of 1000-2000 sec., not well covered by either of these types of
engines, and this remained an unmet requirement for many years, at least in the
West.
Development continued, however, in the USSR, particularly at the Kurchatov
Institute in Moscow
(2)
, under A.I. Morozov’s leadership. Progressively more efficient
configurations were evolved there, and it was realized that the instabilities, while
present and annoying, did not materially interfere with performance. The Soviet
generic name for this type of engine is Thruster with a Closed Electron Drift, and two
competing implementations have been developed, known respectively as the
Stationary Plasma Thruster (SPT) and the Thruster with an Anode Layer (TAL). The
general principles are the same in both, and will be discussed below.
By the early 1980’s these engines had achieved operational status in the USSR, and
have since flow in over 50 missions, which, however, were until recently limited to
relatively small total impulses. Starting in 1991, with the complete removal of the
earlier communications barrier, development has re-started in the West, in the form
of collaborative efforts with Russian teams aimed at improved life, lighter electronics
and flight qualification to the generally more stringent Western standards. The
strong interest shown by the user community stems from the ability of Hall thrusters
to operate with fairly good efficiency (≈50%) in the hitherto difficult specific impulse
range around 1500 sec., and also from their relative simplicity compared to ion
engines.
16.522, Space Propulsion Lecture 17
Prof. Manuel Martinez-Sanchez Page 1 of 7
Figure 1
2. Hall Thruster Physics
The Hall thruster schematic is shown in Fig. 1. It consist of a coaxial annular cavity
where plasma is created by passing current between the annular anode on the
upstream end of an otherwise dielectric cavity and the externally located cathode.
The propellant enters this plasma cavity via an annular manifold at the anode. A
radial magnetic field is applied, either by ring-shaped permanent magnets, or
through coils and soft iron yokes. The magnetic field greatly slows down the axial
mean velocity of the electrons, which, due to the low collisionality prevailing, are
forced to execute mostly E × B drift around the annulus, while being radially
confined by sheaths on the insulating walls.
The ions meanwhile, are only weakly affected by the magnetic field, and, if the
density is low enough that collisions are rare, are simply accelerated by the
electrostatic field to an exit velocity
c
i
=
2eV
m
i
(1)
where V is the potential at the place where the ion is created (with respect to the
outside potential). Because of the quasi-neutrality faciliated by the presence of the
electrons, no space-charge limitation arises in this type of thruster (as opposed to
gridded ion thrusters), and the acceleration distance can be several cm, compared to
the typical 0.5 - 1 mm gap used in ion engines. This flexibility is one of the main
advantages of the Hall thruster. It also removes the strong thrust density limitation
dictated by the Child-Langmuir law in ion engines.
To the extent that collisions do occur, but, more importantly, because of electron
scattering by a combination of plasma electrostatic fluctuations and wall collisions,
electrons also travel axially across the B field under the influence of the applied axial
E field. They are then collected by the upstream anode, and pumped by the power
supply to an external cathode. The emitted electrons mainly join the accelerated ions
to form a neutralized plasma beam, but, inevitably, a fraction also diverts upstream
into the accelerator section. This fraction is to be minimized (this is the role of the
magnetic field) because their acceleration to the anode potential is one of the
device’s loss mechanisms. On the other hand, not all of this energy is lost to the
anode, because a good part of it is used to produce ionization of the injected neutral
gas.
The name “Hall Thruster” arises form the mechanism by which thrust forces are
null
E field, but since the ions are in a quasineutral plasma throughout,
exerted on the solid parts of the engine. As indicated, ions are simply accelerated by
the electrostatic
an equal and opposite electrostatic force is exerted on the free electrons in that
plasma. In the presence of the radial magnetic field
null
B , however, these electrons are
null
E and
not free to accelerate towards the anode; instead, they “drift” azimuthally
(perpendicular to both
null
B ) at such a velocity as to generate an equal and
opposite magnetic force on themselves. If we denote by x the forward axial direction
(Fig. 2) the electrons end up balanced as
16.522, Space Propulsion Lecture 17
Prof. Manuel Martinez-Sanchez Page 3 of 7
?e
/
()
[ ]
e
null
B
null
υ
null
E + ×
= 0 (2)
or
null
υ =?
e
Drift
null
B
null
E ×
B
2
(3)
?
?
υ =?
E
x
?
?
(4)e?
? B ?
r
The ions have no such azimuthal drift (or have a very small one, because their Gyro
radius is larger than the device’s length), and so a net azimuthal current density
arises, called a Hall current:
null
null
j =?en υ
e Drift
null
B
null
E ×
= en (5)
e
B
2
Given a current
Hall
in a plasma, the magnetic (Lorentz) force density on it is
=
Hall
×
null
j
null
B ) and an equal and opposite force is exerted by the plasma currents on
null
j
null
f
the magnetic structure). We then have
×
e e
Drift
null
υ
null
f =?en
null
B
and using Eq. (2),
null
E
null
f =+en
e
(6)
i.e., the same as the forward electrostatic force on the ions, as it should be. The
important point is that the structure is not electrostatically acted on (electric fields
and electric pressures are too weak here), but magnetically, through the Hall current
- hence the name. The device is a Hall thruster, but an electrostatic accelerator, a
duality which has led to some confusion.
3. Thrust Capability
Unlike the case of a gridded ion engine, there is not a clear-cut upper limit to the
obtainable thrust density in a Hall thruster. In principle, increasing the mass flow
rate through a given engine would increase thrust by the same factor, provided the
same degree of ionization can be maintained. The voltage is presumed to be kept the
same, since this controls specific impulse fairly directly. The ion beam current and
the electron current leaking into the accelerating channel would increase as the mass
16.522, Space Propulsion
Prof. Manuel Martinez-Sanchez
Lecture 17
Page 4 of 7
x
flow rate, so that the energetic ability of these electrons to ionize the increased
neutral flow would be maintained. Since no space change develops these increases in
flow, current and power could go on indefinitely.
The above reasoning has ignored the various effects of collisions:
(a) As far as the electrons, as the flow rate, and hence the gas density increases, so
does the scattering collision frequency υ
e
= n
H
c
e
Q
EH
(n
H
=heavy particle density,
frequency becomes comparable to the gyro or cyclotron frequency ω
c
e
=
8
π
kT
e
m
e
mean electron speed, Q
eH
= mean scattering cross-section). When this
eB
= the
c
m
e
electrons can no longer maintain pure azimuthal drift, because each collision will
allow the electric field to nudge them in the direction of the anode by about one
Larmor radius V / ω correspondingly to a velocity υ= E
x
/ B, which is the azimuthal
c
drift velocity. Thus, electrons are now able to cross the magnetic barrier at a velocity
E V
x e
υ ? (7)
B ω
c
which increases with υ , hence with n
H
and ultimately with m
Y
. The electron density
e
n in the acceleration region is governed by the flow of ions from the upstream
e
ionization region, as shown in the schematic, and increases generally in the same
proportion as m
Y
or I
B
. This means that the electron “leakage” current
E υ
x e
I
leak
= en
e
B ω
(8)
c
will increase faster than I
B
, due to the n
H
factor in υ . As will be discussed later,
e
one of the factors determining the overall efficiency η of the device
η =
I
B
a
I
a
and from the schematic, ignoring wall losses, I
B
= I ? I
leak
, so
a
1
η = 1 ?
I
leak
=
a
I 1 + I
leak
/ I
Ba
16.522, Space Propulsion Lecture 17
Prof. Manuel Martinez-Sanchez Page 5 of 7
Figure 3
which shows how the higher electron collisionality would hurt efficiency. By the way,
Eq. (8) also shows that, if this were the only problem with higher flow rates,
increasing the magnetic field strength (if it were feasible) would be a way to
counteract it. Quantitatively, we would like to keep I
leak
/ I
B
? 0.2 . Assuming the ions
constituting I
B
cross the magnetic barrier at about 1/2 of their eventual speed c, this
yields
I
leak
=
υ
ex
2 E
x
υ
e
≤ 0.2=
I
B
c /2 c B ω
c
or
cBω
c
υ ≤ 0.1 (11)
e
E
x
?
?
For SPT-100 thruster, c=16,000m/s, B ? 0.02Tesla
?
ω
c
=
eB
? 3.5 × 10
9
rad / s
?
and
? m ?
e
?1
E ? 5000V / m in the high B region. Eq. (11) then requires υ ≤ 2.2 × 10
7
sec . At
x e
T ? 10 eV, c = 2.1 × 10
6
m / s , and the scattering cross-section for e-neutral collisions
e e
2
is about 3 × 10
?19
m . We then obtain a limiting neutral density in this region
n =
υ
en
≤ 0.35 × 10
20
m
?3
n
c
e
Q
en
For reference, measured neutral densities in this type of thruster are shown
(together with those of potential, ionization rate, electron density and electron
temperature) in Bishaev et al, Ref. 4. The thruster layout, the
magnetic field lines, and the measured ion fluxes are shown for the same
thruster. As the figure indicates maximum E
x
(the acceleration layer, coincident with
the high B
r
region). Thus, as noted, this particular thruster is not
yet limited by electron scattering.
16.522, Space Propulsion Lecture 17
Prof. Manuel Martinez-Sanchez Page 6 of 7
References:
(1) Seikel, G., and E. Reshotko. “Hall Current Ion Accelerator.” Bull, Am. Phys. Soc.
Series 11, V. 7, No. 7 (1962): 19. Also Salz. F., R. Meyerand, and E. Larry. “Ion
Acceleration in Gyro Dominated Neutral Plasma”. Experim. Bull, Am. Phys. Soc.Sec.
11, Vol. 7, No. 7 (1962): 441.
(2) Yushmanov, Ye. Ye. “Radial Potential Distribution in the Cylindrical Trap with the
Magnetron Method of Injecting the Ions”. Phys. of Plasma on Controlled
Thermonuclear Fusion. Vol. 4. AS of the USSR, 1958.
(3) Krulle, and Zeyfang. “Preliminary Conclusions of Applied Field Electromagnetic
Thruster Research at DFVLR.” AIAA Paper 75-417. 11th AIAA Electric Propulsion
Conference, New Orleans, 1975.
(4) Bishaev, A. M., V. M. Gavryushin, A. I. Bugrova, V. Kim, and V. K.
Kharchevnikov. “The Experimental Investigation of Physical Processes and
Characteristics of Stationary Plasma Thrusters with Closed Drift of Electrons.” RGC
EP 92-08. Also in Bishaev, A. M., and V. Kim. “Local Plasma Properties in a Hall
Current Accelerator with an Extended Acceleration Zone.” Sov. Phys. Tech. Phys. 23,
no. 9 (September 1978): pp. 1055-1057.
16.522, Space Propulsion Lecture 17
Prof. Manuel Martinez-Sanchez Page 7 of 7