Ion Engine

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Ion engines are an electric thruster type that uses charged particles as propellant. Particle sizes range from subatomic particles to small grains of dust. Propellant is ejected from a nozzle using electrostatic or electromagnetic forces. Generally, they have very high exhaust velocities and little thrust.

Thrust power has to be handled by components such as wires, electrostatic tubes or magnetic coils. These are usually heavy and limited to a low operating temperature, so the specific power of an ion engine is much lower than a thermal rocket. After including the power generating system and the radiators to remove waste heat, we get a propulsion system that accelerates slowly.

The low acceleration of ion engines means spacecraft generally have to use less efficient spiral trajectories near planets with a strong gravitational field, and have to forgo the benefits of Oberth burns. Trying to take off from a planet will usually require an entirely different propulsion system with better thrust. The ion drive’s high exhaust velocity means that an impressive amount of deltaV is possible with a small propellant load. A spaceship with ion engines can accelerate to huge velocities given enough time; the greater the distance required, the likelier it is that an ion drive can get you there in less time.

Introduction

Ion engines are not a modern technology, but have only recently been embraced by aerospace companies. Satellite manufacturers are relying on ion engines to perform station-keeping over the course of decades. Interplanetary probes use them for deep space maneuvers, or to cut down on the size of the spacecraft needed to reach planets like Mercury or Jupiter.

This is all thanks to it being a highly scalable solution with a high specific impulse, leading to kilometers per second of deltaV with low mass ratios. The smallest ion engines are the size of your fingertip, and they have no upper limit to how large and powerful they can get.

Most development of ion engines happens at small scales, aimed at CubeSat-sized missions. These engines consume a few watts to a few hundred watts of power, with their thrust being measured in milliNewtons. Their main challenge is efficiency. Converting electrical current from the voltage that is produced by solar panels to the voltage used by the engine, ionizing the propellant flow, energizing the nozzle coils and even resistance in the wires become disproportionately large losses. Less watts come out of the engine as exhaust than is spent doing all these other tasks.

There is also research into making larger ion engines. Existing record-holding designs climb into the hundreds of kilowatts. Their efficiency improves, as does their specific power. However, some designs run into endurance limits. Solid electrodes are eroded after being held at high temperatures, ceramic chambers suffer from sputtering and electric grids wither away when bombarded by ions. Solutions like electrodeless thrusters are necessary to run these engines for long durations.

Ion engines naturally have low thrust due to their high exhaust velocity. The electrical generation system and radiator requirements quickly add mass that reduces the overall specific power of the propulsion system. Low specific power and low thrust means much lower acceleration than a thermal engine of the same power level. Prolonged burns are needed to get anywhere.

Low acceleration limits ion engines are only suited for transfers from one orbit in space to another. Strong gravity bends the trajectories they can take into a series of tight spirals that cost a lot more deltaV than the simple Hohmann transfers a high-thrust engine could use. A spaceship equipped with an ion engine that tries to climb from Low Earth Orbit to reach the Moon could take months and require more than twice the deltaV of a chemical rocket. The low thrust of ion engines prevents them from overcoming the gravity of a planet for a surface takeoff, exploiting the Oberth effect or making use of powered gravitational assists.

Where ion engines shine are missions where long-duration accelerations are key to mission success. DeltaVs in the tens of kilometers per second are possible even with today’s technology. They can drastically reduce the travel time between planets and if given enough time, cover great distances. Their low acceleration is not a major hindrance in accelerating in interplanetary space, overcoming solar gravity,.or around the reduced surface gravities of the numerous small bodies in our solar system.

Engine Performance

Example table for Engine Performance for Busek RF Gridded Electrostatic Ion Thrusters

Name Busek BIT-3
ISP or Exhaust Velocity <22,555 m/s
<2300 s
Thrust <1.25 mN
Mass 1.28 kg
Efficiency 17.6% (Calculated)*
Drive Power <14.09 W (Calculated)**
Power Consumption 56-80 W
T/W 0.0000996 (Calculated)
Energy Source (Fuel) Electricity
Propellant Iodine
Reactor Grids
Specific Density 10.9 W/kg (Calculated)

Design and Function

There are three main steps in an ion engine’s operation. -Delivering propellant -Creating charged particles -Accelerating charged particles

Ion engines conduct these steps in a variety of ways, depending on their exact model. The NSTAR ion engine used on the Dawn space probe used xenon gas as propellant. The gas was piped into a chamber where an electron gun knocked off charges from the xenon atoms, giving them a positive charge and making them xenon ions. Once inside the chamber, the ions were held by a magnetic field to improve ionization efficiency. Eventually, the ions would diffuse out of the chamber and into the gap between a pair of charged grids. The voltage difference between the grids accelerated the ions out of the engine, producing thrust, and shunting free electrons back into the chamber. A second electron gun fired electrons into the exhaust to neutralize it.

While NSTAR’s xenon engine is efficient, there are several other ways to achieve the three steps listed above. For example, a liquid propellant could be sprayed in the form of droplets, charged particles could be created by the action of radiofrequency waves and the propellant could be accelerated by powerful magnetic pulses. Each method has its own advantages and disadvantages, but in general, designers of ion engines strive to minimize the portion of electrical energy spent ionizing the propellant and maximizing how much is spent sending it out the nozzle. This has an impact on the choice of propellant. Ion engines that use mercury need 5.02 MJ/kg, while xenon requires 8.91 MJ/kg. A thruster that aims for a higher exhaust velocity at the expense of thrust has a lower propellant flow; this allows mission planners to spend more of their launch payload on useful hardware, rather than propellant.

Here is a list of elements by their ionization energy in MJ/kg:

Note that ion engines can be designed to use a huge number of propellants, including molecules, dust particles, liquid metals and more. Ionization energy is an important parameter but many other factors come into play.

For example, many of the elements with the lowest ionization energy per kilogram are highly radioactive and solid up to extreme temperatures. They would be a pain to handle! Other options may be toxic (mercury) or carcinogenic (cadmium). Erosion from reactive species like potassium must be considered. As is the availability and ease of production of a propellant if ISRU is something you want. Xenon may be a great choice for most electric thrusters, but it is much harder to find in our solar system than nitrogen.

Some ion engine designs are flexible enough to use multiple propellants, or mixes that meet certain specifications. For example, airbreathing electric ramjets use different nitrogen, oxygen and hydrogen ratios depending on which orbital altitude they operate at.

With all these options and possibilities in mind, we can reduce ion engines into two main categories:

  • Electrostatic thrusters
  • Electromagnetic thruster / plasma propulsion engines

Engine Design

The categories differ in how the ions are accelerated.

Electrostatic Ion Thruster:

Electrostatic thrusters accelerate ions via large voltage differences. Charged particles feel an attraction to a charge of the opposite sign and a repulsion to a charge of the same sign, resulting in a force called the Coulomb force.

There are four types of electrostatic thruster that use this principle:

  • The gridded electrostatic ion thruster [link], which uses electrostatic grids to accelerate the propellant. Charged particles are subject to an electric force when travelling between the grids but not outside the grids.
  • The electrostatic colloid thruster [link], which uses droplets of ionic liquid produced by an electrospray ionization process. An electrode provides the electric field to extract the droplets and accelerate them.
  • The Hall effect ion thruster [link], which uses a voltage between a cylindrical anode and a negatively charged plasma cathode. Propellant is introduced and ionized at the anode, and accelerates after reaching the cathode, picking up electrons and becoming a neutral gas so that it is not pulled back into the engine.
  • The field emission electric propulsion thruster [link], which extracts ions from liquid metal using very high electric fields. Liquid metals like caesium or iridium flow into the tip of a fountain-pen-like structure to make this process easier.

There is a form of electrostatic colloid thruster that uses the beta emissions of a radioactive substance to generate the voltages necessary to eject droplets of ionic liquid.

Electromagnetic Ion Thruster / Plasma Propulsion Engine:

There are even more ways to accelerate ions using magnetic fields instead of electric fields. Charged particles are sensitive to the Lorentz force, the same force that ejects projectiles out of a railgun. Other electromagnetic ion thrusters use the ponderomotive force, the result of oscillating magnetic fields, or have found some other clever way to use magnetic fields.

Magnetic fields push on negatively and positively charged particles equally. This means they put on both ions and electrons, which together form a plasma, and is the reason this type of electric thruster is also called a plasma propulsion engine.

There are 8 main types of electromagnetic ion thrusters in summary:


  • The pulsed plasma thruster [link], which uses an electric arc to vaporize propellant (usually a block of teflon or PTFE) into plasma. Due to the force of the vaporization, the propellant plasma is ejected into the gap between an electrode and anode, where an electrical current runs through it and causes it to be further accelerated by the Lorentz force.


  • The ELF pulsed plasmoid thruster [link], which generates a plasmoid (a smoke torus of plasma) from propellant and expands it down an electrically conducting nozzle, with directed kinetic energy (KE) generated from image currents in the nozzle due to interactions with the plasmoid. It is also electrodeless.
    • The alfvenic pulsed plasmoid thruster [link], which uses magnetic reconnection (the same kind that causes solar flares) to spontaneously generate low-temperature plasmoids. The outgoing plasmoid is an alfvenic outflow from the reconnection site, and so depends on the magnetic field strength rather than the propellant ion species mass for thrust.


  • The pulsed inductive thruster [link], which uses pulses instead of continuous thrust and can run on high power levels (on the order of megawatts). Using a coil and conical propellant emitter, large built up charges are released behind the coil. This creates an electric current, and induces a magnetic field in the propellant. Together, the electric and magnetic fields accelerate the propellant through the Lorentz force.


  • The magnetoplasmadynamic thruster [link], which ionizes the propellant via the electric field between an anode and a cathode. The plasma conducts electricity between the anode and cathode, closing the circuit, and creating a new magnetic field, which with the electric field, accelerates the propellant through the Lorentz force.


  • The electrodeless plasma thruster [link], which does not use anode or cathode electrodes. Propellant is ionized through electromagnetic waves, and oscillating electric and magnetic fields in another chamber accelerate the propellant due to the ponderomotive force. The separation of ionization and acceleration steps allows for throttling.


  • The helicon double-layer thruster [link], which uses radio waves emitted from an antenna to ionize the propellant into a plasma and excite a helicon wave (a low frequency EM wave bounded inside the plasma), further heating it. A special kind of magnetic nozzle accelerates the propellant.


  • The VASIMR [link], which functions similarly to the helicon double-layer thruster but uses an additional second step to heat the plasma to 1 million K through ion cyclotron resonance heating. It uses superconductors to magnetically confine the plasma, and thrust is generated when the plasma escapes confinement as the exhaust. VASIMR has mechanisms that allow it to trade lower exhaust velocity and Isp for higher thrust.

Electrostatic Ion Thruster Mathematics

An electron with a charge of -1 leaving a hot cathode to an anode with a 100 V voltage difference between them will acquire an energy of 100 electron-Volts (or eV). A nanogram sized speck of dust with a million positive charges moving up a 10 V gradient will acquire an energy of 10 million electron-Volts (or MeV).

The equation for how much energy E in eV a charged particle gains is:

  • With E the energy in joules, q is the particle’s charge in coulombs, and V the voltage in volts.

The electron is a lightweight subatomic particle. 100 eV is enough to get it moving at 5929 km/s. The dust particle is relatively heavy. 10 MeV will just push it to 1.79 m/s.

These figures are derived from the equation for kinetic energy:

  • With E the particle’s energy in joules, m the particle’s mass in kg, and v the velocity in m/s.

Which is rearranged to give velocity:

History / Development

[This section should be in its own specific history article, so a link would be provided here instead of the text]

The conceptual history of ion engines dates back to 1911, by Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, the first person to publish a paper on the subject. He recommended it for near-vacuum conditions at altitude, however thrust was also seen with ionized air streams at atmospheric pressure.

Hermann Oberth later reignited conversation with his “Ways to Spaceflight” book in 1923, talking about its advantages in mass ratios and mass savings for payloads. He predicted its usage in spacecraft propulsion and attitude control, as well advocated for the electrostatic kind of ion thruster.

By 1959, a gridded electrostatic ion thruster had been built by Harold R. Kaufman at NASA Glenn Research Facilities, using mercury as its propellant. Suborbital tests were conducted throughout the 1960s, and an orbital test was done in 1970, the SERT-1 and SERT-2 demonstration missions.

The Hall effect thruster design, studied by both the United States and the Soviet Union, had been used by the Soviets from 1972 to late 1990s for attitude control. It is estimated that 100-200 engines were used on Soviet and Russian missions. By 1992, the designs had been brought to the West, thanks to a team of electric propulsion specialists from the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization (BMDO) visiting Soviet labs.

Worked Examples

Electrostatic Ion Thruster:

Gridded Electrostatic Ion Thruster - NSTAR, NeXT

Colloid Thruster - Busek Electrospray Thruster Bookmark

Hall Effect Ion Thruster - PPS-1350, on the SMART-1 mission. AEPS

Field Emission Electric Propulsion Thruster - IFM Nano

Electromagnetic Ion Thruster / Plasma Propulsion Engine:

Pulsed Inductive Thruster - Several laboratory examples built by NGST.

Magnetoplasmadynamic Thruster - MPD thrusters flown on EPEX (Japan) mission

Helicon Double-Layer Thruster - Prototype built by Dr Christine Charles

VASIMR - VX-10, VX-50, VX-100, VX-200. Built by Ad Astra. (not flown)

Additional Reading

Links from ion engine design section Links from history section

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/886253956777533450/887757110501318757/POTENTIALITIES_OF_THE_RADIOISQTOPE_ELECTROSTATIC_PROPULSION_SYSTEM.pdf Further reading for the radioisotope ion thruster.

Additional References

https://satsearch.co/products/busek-bit-3
http://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/enginelist.php
https://www.busek.com/bet-300p

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion_thruster
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NASA_Solar_Technology_Application_Readiness
https://www1.grc.nasa.gov/space/sep/gridded-ion-thrusters-next-c/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gridded_ion_thruster
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hall-effect_thruster
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field-emission_electric_propulsion

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulsed_inductive_thruster
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetoplasmadynamic_thruster
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrodeless_plasma_thruster
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helicon_double-layer_thruster
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variable_Specific_Impulse_Magnetoplasma_Rocket
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microwave_electrothermal_thruster

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SERT-1
https://spacemath.gsfc.nasa.gov/weekly/5Page64.pdf
Electrostatic Ion Engine Math

Credit:

To Tshhmon for writing the article

  • To SOPHONT SIMP for test-reading
  • To KRKIIIIII for test-reading
  • To AdAstraGames for test-reading and some editing
  • To MatterbeamToughSF for checking sources and technical details