4.6 Article

Wave propagation and absorption in a helicon plasma thruster and its plume

Journal

PLASMA SOURCES SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6595/ac5ecd

Keywords

waves in plasmas; electric propulsion; electrodeless thrusters; helicon plasma thruster

Funding

  1. HIPATIA project - European Union [870542]
  2. PROMETEO project - Comunidad de Madrid [Y2018/NMT-4750 PROMETEO-CM]

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A two-dimensional, full-wave, frequency domain, cold plasma model is used to study electromagnetic power propagation and absorption in a helicon plasma thruster. Results show that a fraction of power is absorbed in the plume region and that the power deposition in the source is essentially unperturbed by the simulation domain size, the presence of metallic obstacles, or the plasma density in the environment.
A two-dimensional, full-wave, frequency domain, cold plasma model is used to study electromagnetic power propagation and absorption in a helicon plasma thruster, including its far plume region and surrounding space. Results show that a fraction of power is absorbed in the plume region, and that the power deposition in the source is essentially unperturbed by the simulation domain size, the presence of metallic obstacles, or the plasma density in the environment. An electron-cyclotron resonance (ECR) surface always exists downstream that effectively prevents radiation to the space beyond along the plume. In the presence of an overdense environmental plasma, like the one expected in a vacuum chamber, fields are fully evanescent beyond this transition, and vacuum chamber boundary conditions affect but little the wavefields before this surface. In the absence of an environmental plasma, a double wave regime transition exists at the interface between the plasma and vacuum that hinders accurate numerical simulation in the plume region.

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