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University of Michigan Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory Probe-based Measurements of High-Frequency Azimuthal Oscillations in a Magnetically Shielded Hall Thrusters Benjamin Jorns Zachariah Brown University of Michigan


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SLIDE 1

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Probe-based Measurements of High-Frequency Azimuthal Oscillations in a Magnetically Shielded Hall Thrusters Benjamin Jorns Zachariah Brown University of Michigan Princeton University ExB Workshop

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SLIDE 2

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

The Hall effect thruster

๐‘ญ ๐‘ช

๐น ๐น ๐ถ

  • What drives the anomalous across-field transport?
  • Driving hypothesis: transport results from onset of microturbulence in E ร— B direction
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SLIDE 3

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Mechanism for how onset of microturbulence can drive cross-field transport

2) Azimuthal electron cyclotron drive instability (ECDI) driven unstable by drift through inverse cyclotron or Landau damping 3) Electrons slowed in E ร— B direction by wave growth leads to effective drag in Hall direction 1) Strong E ร— B drift between electrons and ions

๐‘ช ๐‘ญ

๐‘ช ๐‘ญ ๐‘พ๐’‡

๐‘ช

๐บ๐ต๐‘‚(๐นร—๐ถ)

j ๐‘ช j

4) Effective drag due to onset

  • f waves gives rise to cross-

field electron current

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SLIDE 4

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Kinetic simulations predict onset of micro-turbulence

Density fluctuations from PIC, 2D model

* A. Hรฉron and J. C. Adam, โ€œAnomalous conductivity in Hall thrusters: Effects of the non-linear coupling of the electron-cyclotron drift instability with secondary electron emission of the walls.โ€œPhysics

  • f Plasmas 20 , 082313 (2013);

Sampling of other numerical models showing instability

  • J. C. Adam , A. Hรฉron , and G. Laval, Physics of Plasmas 11 , 295 (2004)
  • A. Ducrocq , J. C. Adam , A. Hรฉron , and G. Laval, Physics of Plasmas 13 , 102111

(2006);

  • J.P. Boeuf. Frontiers in Physics, Vol. 2, No. 74, (2014)
  • T. Lafleur , , S. D. Baalrud , and P. Chabert, Physics of Plasmas 23, 053502 (2016);
  • V Croes et al. Plasma Sources Sci. Technol. 26 (2017)
  • Janhunen, S., et al., Physics of Plasmas 25, (2018)
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SLIDE 5

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Kinetic simulations predict onset of micro-turbulence

Density fluctuations from PIC, 2D model

* A. Hรฉron and J. C. Adam, โ€œAnomalous conductivity in Hall thrusters: Effects of the non-linear coupling of the electron-cyclotron drift instability with secondary electron emission of the walls.โ€œPhysics

  • f Plasmas 20 , 082313 (2013);

Sampling of other numerical models showing instability

  • J. C. Adam , A. Hรฉron , and G. Laval, Physics of Plasmas 11 , 295 (2004)
  • A. Ducrocq , J. C. Adam , A. Hรฉron , and G. Laval, Physics of Plasmas 13 , 102111

(2006);

  • J.P. Boeuf. Frontiers in Physics, Vol. 2, No. 74, (2014)
  • T. Lafleur , , S. D. Baalrud , and P. Chabert, Physics of Plasmas 23 , 053502 (2016);
  • V Croes et al. Plasma Sources Sci. Technol. 26 (2017)
  • S. Janhunen et al., Physics of Plasmas, 011608 (2018)

Does this type of instability actually exist in Hall thruster discharges?

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SLIDE 6

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental evidence of microturbulence

Experimental dispersion relation of small-scale oscillations in Hall direction

  • Wavelengths < 1 mm
  • Dispersion is acoustic-like
  • Modes are incoherent
  • S. Tsikata, N. Lemoine, V. Pisarev, and D. Grรฉsillon, Physics of
  • Plasmas. Vol. 16., No. 3. 2009.

ECDI in the acoustic-like limit

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SLIDE 7

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental evidence of microturbulence

Experimental dispersion relation of small-scale oscillations in Hall direction

  • Wavelengths < 1 mm
  • Dispersion is acoustic-like
  • Modes are incoherent
  • S. Tsikata, N. Lemoine, V. Pisarev, and D. Grรฉsillon, Physics of
  • Plasmas. Vol. 16., No. 3. 2009.

ECDI in the acoustic-like limit Is this the same wave as predicted in simulations? Can it explain the observed cross-field transport?

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SLIDE 8

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Open experimental questions related to ECDI in Hall thrusters

  • S. Janhunen et al., Physics of Plasmas, 011608 (2018)
  • T. Lafleur and P. Chabert, PSST 27 015003 (2018)

Max growth at cyclotron resonance Max growth on order of Debye length Is this the same wave as predicted in experiments: What is the wavelength/frequency of maximum growth?

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SLIDE 9

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Open experimental questions related to ECDI in Hall thrusters

Is this the same wave as predicted in experiments: What is the wavelength/frequency of maximum growth?

  • T. Lafleur and P. Chabert, PSST 27 015003 (2018)

Experimental measurements

  • S. Janhunen et al., Physics of Plasmas, 011608 (2018)
  • S. Tsikata, N. Lemoine, V. Pisarev, and D. Grรฉsillon, Physics of
  • Plasmas. Vol. 16., No. 3. 2009.

Contradictions with simulations

  • Measurements are broadband
  • Do not show maximum growth wavelength

Simulations

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SLIDE 10

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

  • S. Tsikata, N. Lemoine, V. Pisarev, and D. Grรฉsillon, Physics of
  • Plasmas. Vol. 16., No. 3. 2009.

Contradictions with simulations

  • Measurements are broadband
  • Do not show maximum growth wavelength

Open experimental questions related to ECDI in Hall thrusters

Is this the same wave as predicted in experiments: What is the wavelength/frequency of maximum growth?

  • T. Lafleur and P. Chabert, PSST 27 015003 (2018)
  • S. Janhunen et al., Physics of Plasmas, 011608 (2018)

Simulations What happens here? Experimental measurements

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SLIDE 11

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental Setup at UM

H9: 9kW magnetically shielded Hall effect thruster at 300 V and 4.5 kW Large Vacuum Test Facility at UM

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SLIDE 12

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental Setup at UM

Ion saturation probes

๐œš(๐‘ข) ๐‘ˆ

๐‘“

โ‰ˆ ว ๐‘—๐‘ก๐‘๐‘ข(๐‘ข) าง ๐‘—๐‘ก๐‘๐‘ข

Measure fluctuations and phase delay in Hall direction

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SLIDE 13

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental Setup at UM

Ion saturation probes

๐œš(๐‘ข) ๐‘ˆ

๐‘“

โ‰ˆ ว ๐‘—๐‘ก๐‘๐‘ข(๐‘ข) าง ๐‘—๐‘ก๐‘๐‘ข

Analysis

  • Fourier analysis to find
  • Power spectrum ๐œš(ฯ‰)
  • Cross-correlation ๐œ• ๐‘™
  • Averaging yields statistical

dispersion relation ๐œš(ฯ‰, ๐‘™)

Beall Plot

  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns, AIAA-2018-4423

Measure fluctuations and phase delay in Hall direction

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SLIDE 14

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

H9 at 300 V and 4.5 kW, downstream of exit with probe array

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SLIDE 15

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

  • S. Tsikata, N. Lemoine, V. Pisarev, and D. Grรฉsillon, Physics of
  • Plasmas. Vol. 16., No. 3. 2009.

H9 at 300 V and 4.5 kW, downstream of exit with probe array 5 kW prototype PPS-X000ML downstream of exit with CTS

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SLIDE 16

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

H9 at 300 V and 4.5 kW, downstream of exit with probe array

  • S. Tsikata, N. Lemoine, V. Pisarev, and D. Grรฉsillon, Physics of
  • Plasmas. Vol. 16., No. 3. 2009.

5 kW prototype PPS-X000ML downstream of exit with CTS

  • Linear dispersion confirmed
  • Results fill in some missing

wavenumber space

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SLIDE 17

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

Overlay of results

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SLIDE 18

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

Overlay of results

UM results

Comparison is not one to one but does illustrate both follow similar linear trends

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SLIDE 19

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

Overlay of results

UM results

Comparison is not one to one but does illustrate both fall on similar linear trends Is this power spectrum discrete or broadband?

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SLIDE 20

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

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SLIDE 21

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

Peak at low wavelength Broadband

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SLIDE 22

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

Peak at low wavelength Broadband

Contradictions with simulations

  • Measurements are broadband
  • Maximum growth occurs but at order of

magnitude longer length-scale

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SLIDE 23

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental results from fixed point measurement

Peak at low wavelength Broadband

Contradictions with simulations

  • Measurements are broadband
  • Maximum growth occurs but at order of

magnitude longer length-scale

Why is there this discrepancy? Are simulations inherently missing physical processes?

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SLIDE 24

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Spatial mapping of dispersion in H9

  • Record continuously as probe is injected at high speed
  • Chop waveform into position bins based on injection trajectory

24 12 cm

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SLIDE 25

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Spatial mapping of dispersion in H9

25 12 cm

  • Record continuously as probe is injected at high speed
  • Chop waveform into position bins based on injection trajectory
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SLIDE 26

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Spatial mapping of dispersion in H9

26 12 cm

  • Record continuously as probe is injected at high speed
  • Chop waveform into position bins based on injection trajectory
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SLIDE 27

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Spatial mapping of dispersion in H9

27 12 cm

  • Record continuously as probe is injected at high speed
  • Chop waveform into position bins based on injection trajectory
slide-28
SLIDE 28

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Spatial mapping of dispersion in H9

28 12 cm

  • Record continuously as probe is injected at high speed
  • Chop waveform into position bins based on injection trajectory
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SLIDE 29

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Spatial mapping of dispersion in H9

29 12 cm

  • Record continuously as probe is injected at high speed
  • Chop waveform into position bins based on injection trajectory
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SLIDE 30

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Spatial mapping of dispersion in H9

30 12 cm

  • Record continuously as probe is injected at high speed
  • Chop waveform into position bins based on injection trajectory
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SLIDE 31

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Spatial mapping of dispersion in H9

12 cm

  • Record continuously as probe is injected at high speed
  • Chop waveform into position bins based on injection trajectory
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SLIDE 32

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 33

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 34

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 35

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 36

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 37

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 38

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 39

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

The dispersion relation fundamentally changes nature showing discrete structure upstream Could discrete structure transitioning into broadband explain discrepancy with experiments?

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SLIDE 40

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

40

โ€˜Resonancesโ€™

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SLIDE 41

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 42

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

42

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SLIDE 43

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 44

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 45

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

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SLIDE 46

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

โ€œLowโ€ frequency content grows

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SLIDE 47

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Near-Field Plume

โ€œLowโ€ frequency content grows

Hypothesis: experiments to date have been performed too far downstream of acceleration zone to image formation of ECDI where discrete structure is present How could this transition occur?

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SLIDE 48

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Qualitative comparison with simulation results

Growth in space Growth in time

  • S. Janhunen et al., Physics of Plasmas, 011608 (2018)
  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns (submitted) 2018.

Simulation Experiment

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SLIDE 49

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Qualitative comparison with simulation results

Growth in space Growth in time

  • S. Janhunen et al., Physics of Plasmas, 011608 (2018)
  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns (submitted) 2018.

Simulation Experiment Could there be a non-linear inverse energy transfer from short to long wavelength?

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SLIDE 50

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Qualitative comparison with simulation results

  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns (submitted) 2018.

Power spectra Increase in low wavelength content energy (acoustic modes) increases with position as energy in resonant modes decreases Efforts underway to quantify and understand this transfer

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SLIDE 51

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Qualitative comparison with simulation results

  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns (submitted) 2018.

Power spectra

slide-52
SLIDE 52

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Qualitative comparison with simulation results

  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns (submitted) 2018.

Power spectra Evolution of wave energy density

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SLIDE 53

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Qualitative comparison with simulation results

  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns (submitted) 2018.

Power spectra Evolution of wave energy density Increase in low wavelength content energy (acoustic modes) increases with position as energy in resonant modes decreases Efforts underway to quantify and understand this transfer

slide-54
SLIDE 54

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Experimental evidence of microturbulence

Experimental dispersion relation of small-scale oscillations in Hall direction

  • Wavelengths < 1 mm
  • Dispersion is acoustic-like
  • Modes are incoherent
  • S. Tsikata, N. Lemoine, V. Pisarev, and D. Grรฉsillon, Physics of
  • Plasmas. Vol. 16., No. 3. 2009.

ECDI in the acoustic-like limit Is this the same wave as predicted in simulations? Can it explain the observed cross-field transport?

slide-55
SLIDE 55

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

เทจ ๐น เทค ๐‘œ (Arb. Units)

9kW Magnetically Shielded Hall thruster Power spectrum of ECDI-like oscillations

  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns, "Dispersion relation measurements of plasma modes in

the near-field plume of a 9-kW magnetically shielded thruster,โ€ IEPC-2017-387

Experimental evidence of electron transport driven by instabilities

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SLIDE 56

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

เทจ ๐น เทค ๐‘œ (Arb. Units)

9kW Magnetically Shielded Hall thruster Power spectrum of ECDI-like oscillations

Dominant peak Power law decay

  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns, "Dispersion relation measurements of plasma modes in

the near-field plume of a 9-kW magnetically shielded thruster,โ€ IEPC-2017-387

Experimental evidence of electron transport driven by instabilities

slide-57
SLIDE 57

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

๐ฝ๐‘“ โˆ ๐‘Ÿ ๐ถ เทจ ๐น เทค ๐‘œ

เทจ ๐น เทค ๐‘œ (Arb. Units)

9kW Magnetically Shielded Hall thruster Power spectrum of ECDI-like oscillations

  • Z. Brown and B. Jorns, "Dispersion relation measurements of plasma modes in

the near-field plume of a 9-kW magnetically shielded thruster,โ€ IEPC-2017-387

Experimental evidence of electron transport driven by instabilities

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SLIDE 58

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Classical transport from particle collisions Anomalous transport

Experimental evidence of electron transport driven by instabilities

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SLIDE 59

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Anomalous transport Anomalous transport

Experimental evidence of electron transport driven by instabilities

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SLIDE 60

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Anomalous transport Anomalous transport

Instability driven transport appears to be sufficient to explain electron dynamics in plume (with caveats)

Experimental evidence of electron transport driven by instabilities

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SLIDE 61

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Other experimental insights into ECDI

๐‘‹๐‘ˆ ๐‘œ๐‘ˆ

๐‘“

ECDI energy density in thruster channel

๐œ‰๐ต๐‘‚= ๐›ฝ ๐›ฟ๐‘“ ๐‘‹๐‘ˆ ๐‘œ๐‘ˆ

๐‘“

โ‰ˆ ๐›ฝ ๐›ฟ๐‘“

Critical information for fluid-closure

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SLIDE 62

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Summary

  • A number of simulations suggest that ECDI exists and should exhibit

distinct, measureable features โ€“ Discrete โ€“ Maximum growth at small wavelength

  • Experimental measurements to date have not supported this
  • Probing has shown that discrepancy may in part be due to fact ECDI

spectrum transitions from upstream discrete nature to downstream broadband spectrum

  • The nature of this transition is not known but is currently being

studied

  • Other experimental insights are guiding investigations into closure, e.g.

the observation modes may be saturated

slide-63
SLIDE 63

University of Michigan โ€“ Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory

Follow on experimental questions

  • How does the energy cascade occur and can we measure it?
  • Can we measure shorter wavelengths inside the channel with necessary

spatial resolution?

  • Can we use experiments to guide closure for simulation results?
  • Can kinetic codes ever capture all the nuanced effects (like nonlinear

energy cascade in 3D) likely occuring in this geometry?

  • What other experimental measurements can we make to characterize

predictions related to ECDI: โ€“ Ion azimuthal drift (on-going at UM) โ€“ Direct measurements of electron transport (on-going at UM)