WO1998019817A1 - Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma - Google Patents
Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma Download PDFInfo
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- WO1998019817A1 WO1998019817A1 PCT/US1997/019306 US9719306W WO9819817A1 WO 1998019817 A1 WO1998019817 A1 WO 1998019817A1 US 9719306 W US9719306 W US 9719306W WO 9819817 A1 WO9819817 A1 WO 9819817A1
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03H—PRODUCING A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03H1/00—Using plasma to produce a reactive propulsive thrust
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05H—PLASMA TECHNIQUE; PRODUCTION OF ACCELERATED ELECTRICALLY-CHARGED PARTICLES OR OF NEUTRONS; PRODUCTION OR ACCELERATION OF NEUTRAL MOLECULAR OR ATOMIC BEAMS
- H05H1/00—Generating plasma; Handling plasma
- H05H1/54—Plasma accelerators
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02E—REDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
- Y02E30/00—Energy generation of nuclear origin
- Y02E30/10—Nuclear fusion reactors
Definitions
- the present invention concerns a device, that uses ions or neutrally charged gas to provide a thrust force or stream of matter.
- invention concerns a device that ejects matter with a jet form for use as an industrial plasma spray, industrial material processing, waste treatment, welding or cutting materials, or for plasma vapor deposition.
- the invention also concerns a device that can provide a propulsive thrust force for spacecraft propulsion, particularly an ion jet thruster, which uses an inertial electrostatic confinement design having a discharge plasma for generating ions that provide thrust when accelerated and expelled from the device in the plasma jet.
- designers of spacecraft are especially concerned with the cost per unit of "commercial payload" that is provided by their design. Giving the limited capacity of expendable rockets and the "space shuttle”, severe size and mass limitations are placed upon the spacecraft design.
- the "commercial payload" for a communication satellite such as one that would be launched into geostationary orbit to provide voice, data and television services, would include equipment, such as antennas, transponders, signal processing and switching equipment, which directly provide the communications service.
- the "commercial payload" In order to maximize the profitability of a given spacecraft design, the "commercial payload" must be maximized in order to provide the largest amount of revenue-producing capability.
- the orbit steering thrust system for a spacecraft is important because it may be utilized for at least two purposes.
- One purpose is the maintenance of the spacecraft in geostationary or low/medium altitude Earth orbit or interplanetary flight paths.
- the thrusters impart a change of momentum which changes the velocity vector at a pre-determined point or segment of the trajectory.
- the other purpose of thrusters is the function of actuators of a system for the maintenance of the spacecraft attitude or orientation. In the vacuum of space reaction forces are achieved by momentum changes.
- the rocket or jet method is well understood in the field.
- a further application for the propulsion system is the injection of the spacecraft into orbit, a task typically accomplished by relatively high thrust chemical rocket engines.
- the thrusters must operate within a desired power regime and provide a specific impulse level (i.e., impulse or force per unit of propellant mass consumed during a given time interval) , level of efficiency and thrust suitable for its application.
- impulse level i.e., impulse or force per unit of propellant mass consumed during a given time interval
- thrust levels suitable for its application.
- conventional spacecraft propulsion systems have used monopropellant thrusters.
- Electrostatic ion thrusters also have been proposed for these purposes; however, to date, this technology has not proven to be sufficiently mature and reliable for commercial and scientific spacecraft applications.
- next-generation communication satellites will require alternative thrust systems that are a small fraction of the satellite mass.
- These thrusters must also operate in a low power range (200-700W) , but must provide a moderate specific impulse (1000-3000s) and offer a thrust in the range of tens of milli-Newtons (mN) .
- known electrical augmented thruster designs such as arc- jet and resisto-jet thrusters, do not operate well at power levels below 1 Kw.
- Pulsed magnetoplasmadynamic (MPD) thrusters using plastics or other solid propellants have low efficiencies, typically under 30%, making them incompatible with the goal of reducing the spacecraft overhead payload mass.
- Patent 5,369,953 J.R. Kaufman's original electron bombardment thruster concept (U.S. Patent 3,156,090), and R. Boyer and J.P. Journoux's gas ionization chamber concept (U.S. Patent No. 4,468,564). Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a design for an ion thruster which will reduce grid erosion and significantly increase thruster lifetime.
- the present invention is an electrostatic ion jet source design, based on inertial electrostatic confinement (IEC) technology.
- the inertial electrostatic confinement jet source employs a configuration that is compatible with the generation and acceleration of ions within a vacuum chamber.
- the jet source employs a spherical configuration wherein ions are generated and accelerated towards a core at the center of an electrically grounded spherical vacuum chamber.
- a gaseous propellant is introduced into the chamber at appropriate locations around the vessel.
- a first wire grid preferably a spherical cathode wire grid having a high geometric transparency (preferably > 90%), and being designed to provide an exceedingly high effective transparency (preferably 98-99%)
- Effective transparency is defined as the probability of ions passing through a grid in the case where the flowing ion beam profile is non-uniform.
- the invention further comprises an auxiliary "channel" grid design which uses a cylindrical vessel having a longitudinal axis along which ions are directed for ejection from the vessel.
- the invention further comprises an IEC device of a spherical, cylindrical or other design geometry, having grid-like electrodes which are biased at a potential sufficient to generate and accelerate ions.
- the device includes a channel grid which creates a channel in the electrostatic potential through which ions may escape at maximum kinetic energy.
- a further feature of the IEC plasma jet device is that it may have two configurations for ion/plasma generation.
- the first configuration employs only a simple plasma glow discharge between the outer ground sphere and the negatively-biased inner spherical cathode wire grid. Electrons impact the background neutral gas throughout the discharge region between the cathode grid and the ground wall, creating ions which are then accelerated by the cathode grid to the core of the device.
- the second configuration for ion generation employs an additional spherical wire grid that is larger in diameter than the cathode grid and which is situated between the cathode grid and the ground wall, but it is closer to the ground wall. Electron emitters, such as heated thoriated wires, are spaced around the ground wall.
- the additional spherical wire grid also has a high geometric transparency (>90%) , and it is biased to a positive voltage (100 to 1000 V).
- This outer anode grid is an electron guide grid which helps to re-circulate and confine the majority of electrons created by the emitters in a thin spherical volume localized around the guide grid, thus helping to maximize and localize the ionization of the background neutral gas and the generation of ions in this volume, close to the ground wall.
- the electron guide grid in combination with electron emitters, improves the ionization efficiency of the IEC plasma jet device, and since the ion generation is more localized, the accelerated ions that reach the core have a more mono-energetic distribution. These features improve the thrust and efficiency of the plasma thruster, and allow more control over the jet for plasma processing.
- a further feature of the invention is to use a carbon rich gas, such as methane, in combination with other buffer gas, such as Argon or Xenon, which is bled into the device through holes disposed at strategic locations around the chamber outer wall.
- a carbon rich gas such as methane
- other buffer gas such as Argon or Xenon
- the ionization and confinement conditions may be selected to produce Fullerene species of carbon molecules, such as Carbon 60.
- These very high molecular weight molecules are desirable as propellants in ion rocket motors because the momentum change or thrust is much improved. The specific impulse will be improved.
- the gaseous or even liquid methane propellant can be relatively easily stored on the space vehicle.
- Another feature of the invention is to use nitrogen gas as the propellant. Although such a propellant would not offer the highest specific impulse, it may be preferred when great quantities of atmospheric air are scooped by a low Earth orbit liquid oxygen collector satellite.
- the by-product is liquid nitrogen.
- the use of the nitrogen would be necessary to compensate for the steady deceleration force of atmospheric drag.
- a battery of IEC jet rocket motors may provide the drag compensation thrust.
- the propellant gas may be utilized as a carrier or buffer for other materials such as metals.
- metals would be introduced into the chamber by the gas stream in microscopic particulate form. Ionization of the metallic particles would render the metal to individual metal atoms or ions.
- the metal ion spray would be aimed at the targets which would typically be plastic or metal components that would become coated. The resulting highly specular coatings are commonly seen on "metalized or metal coated plastic components and base metal "chromed” bathroom fittings .
- PVD Plasma Vapor Deposition
- Another feature of the invention is that the kinetic energy of the plasma or neutral jet may be controlled so that a degree of penetration of the particles into a target material may be consistently reproduced. Such operation could provide unique identical cutting, or when used for local heating, welding or cutting operations.
- Another related application that would employ the heating-melting capability of the plasma jet would be treatment of wastes. For example, various organic waste impregnated in soils could be heated, decomposed, and the products driven off as vapors for subsequent disposal.
- Various industrial as well as research tool applications would be evolved as derivatives of the IEC jet invention.
- the IEC jet source is unique as a spherical device with its special enlarged hole grid for forming the jet, the use of electron emitters and an electron guide grid to oscillate electrons in an outer ionization region to serve as the ion source, and the use of a cylindrical guide channel grid to aid the jet flow out of the spherical grid region.
- Figure 1 is a schematic diagram of an inertial electrostatic confinement (IEC) neutron/proton generator, which is the subject of co-pending application S.N. 08/232,764.
- IEC inertial electrostatic confinement
- FIG. 2 is a schematic design for an IEC jet source, which is the subject of the present invention.
- Figure 3 is an illustration of the electrical potential along a thrust axis of the IEC jet source.
- Figure 4 is an illustration of the star mode for an IEC jet source showing microchannels developed during operation.
- Figure 5 is an illustration of the IEC thruster operating in a jet mode with a focus beam.
- FIG 6 is an illustration of an ionization process in an IEC jet source.
- Figure 7 is an illustration of the IEC jet being used for plasma processing of a single stationary target.
- Figure 8 is an illustration of the IEC jet being used for continual plasma processing of multiple targets being transported using a system of access ports, control valves, and a conveyor belt.
- Figure 9 is an illustration of the IEC jet device with a pulse power system to enhance and control its performance.
- Figure 10 is an illustration of an IEC fusion plasma jet thruster that uses deuterium and helium-3 as fusion fuel sources.
- Figure 11 is an illustration of an alternative embodiment of an IEC jet source.
- the inertial electrostatic confinement device disclosed therein includes a vacuum vessel which is held at ground potential and contains internally and concentric to the vessel, a wire grid which acts as a cathode.
- the cathode may be made from a variety of metals having structural strength and appropriate secondary electron and thermionic electron coefficients .
- the cathode wire grid is connected to a power source to provide a high negative potential (30 kV-150 Kv) , while the vessel itself is conductive and maintained at a ground potential.
- Deuterium (D) or a mixture of deuterium and tritium (T) or helium-3 (He-3) gas is introduced into the vessel.
- a voltage is applied to the cathode wire grid and the pressure is adjusted in order initiate a glow discharge.
- operational conditions are used to create a "star" glow discharge mode.
- the glow discharge generates ions in the discharge region between the grid and vessel wall. Ions thus formed are extracted from the discharge by the electric field created by the cathode grid.
- This electric field accelerates the extracted ions through the grid openings and focuses them in a small spherical region (forming a "plasma core") at a spot in the center of the spherical device.
- the resulting high-energy ions interact with the background gas (beam-background reactions) and themselves (beam-beam reactions) in the plasma core, resulting in a high rate of fusion reactions.
- the result is a neutron generator producing neutrons as one of the D-D or D-T fusion reaction products.
- the injected ions may provide a strong local positive potential region that then attracts and accelerates electrons towards the plasma core.
- the electrons in turn generate a strong local negative potential well at the center region of the positive ion generated potential.
- This structure termed a "double potential well", traps and confines beam ions, creating even higher reaction rates.
- the device may be modified by using a gas mixture of D and He-3 to be a source of fusion- produced protons as well as neutron
- One geometrical form of the device is spherical and is seen in Figure 1.
- This device may be broadly viewed as an ion accelerator with a plasma target.
- deuterium- deuterium or deuterium-tritium fusion reaction takes place in the plasma target and produce energetic neutrons.
- the device acts as a simple spherical plasma diode, having a ground potential on the outer sphere and a negative potential on a nearly geometrically transparent inner spherical grid.
- the spherical inertial electrostatic confinement device 10 is illustrated in Figure 1, where a conductive vacuum chamber 11 is connected to a ground potential at contact 17.
- high-density ions and electron beams will form within the IEC device initiating a "star" mode of operation.
- high-density, space-charged neutralized ion beams are formed into microchannels that pass through the open spaces between the grid wires.
- this mode increases the effective grid transparency to a level above the geometric value.
- these microchannels significantly reduce grid bombardment and erosion and increase power efficiency.
- the grid and microchannel beams are symmetric so that a convergent high-density core develops. In this configuration, the IEC device serves as a valuable source of neutrons or protons.
- the basic principles of the IEC device have been extended to the generation and channeling of a plasma jet out of an opening in the vacuum vessel in order to create a thrust. It has been determined that by enlarging at least one of the grid openings, a very intense, tightly coupled space-charge neutralized plasma jet will be created and directed outward from the central core plasma region. The jet formation is the result of a large distortion of the electric potential surface at the enlarged grid opening. The resulting local potential gradient initiates electron flow which then drags ions out across the surface. The result is the formation of an intense space charge neutralized beam at that location.
- the IEC thruster produces ions in the gas discharge region through the ejection and oscillation of electrons about a guide grid that is held at a slightly positive voltage.
- a central negative grid extracts ions from the discharge region and accelerates them towards the center of the device.
- the "star" mode when initiated within the IEC thruster vessel, confines accelerated ions until they are diverted out through the plasma jet opening. With this approach, a majority of ions are able to escape the core region through the plasma jet at full acceleration. Thus, the local potential gradient perturbed "star" mode provides an efficient method to store and direct energetic ions .
- the design of an IEC jet source is shown in Figure 2.
- the source 110 is comprised of a spherical vacuum chamber 111 with a small hole 112 formed in one side.
- a spherical electrode grid 113 constructed of wire or vanes with their planar axes intersecting at the spherical electrode centroid, which are made of high temperature, high electron emissive material such as tungsten or tantalum, has a geometric transparency of greater than 90%, is mounted inside the chamber.
- the grid also may be formed of a plurality of vanes joined together in a geometric pattern that provides a thin profile when viewed in a radial direction in order to achieve a high geometric transparency.
- the grid serves to define a central volume that confines a plasma, formed of generated ions, and provides an ion stream that becomes the plasma jet.
- a second hole 114 is formed in the side of the wire grid 113. This hole
- the cylindrical grid 115 creates a channel in the electrostatic potential distribution, through which ions can escape at their maximum kinetic energy in a jet 117.
- the electrostatic potential variation is shown in Figure 3.
- An insulator 118 covers the grounded wall of the chamber 111 and must be sized to prevent arc-over from the grounded vessel wall to the cylindrical grid 115.
- this high-voltage insulator has a spherical shape and covers the outer ground wall in the region near the hole through which the plasma jet exits the device.
- the high-voltage insulator also lines the inside of the hole 112 through which the plasma jet passes.
- a positively charged outer electrical grid 116 which is connected to a power supply 126 (for example, 10-1000 V) and is positioned to be concentric with and near the grounded sphere 111, in combination with electron emitters 121, will generate ions.
- the intermediate spherical grid-like structure 116 which lies between the inner cathode and the outer ground sphere, is highly transparent to ion and electron flow and is biased to a voltage positive relative to the ground sphere potential.
- This structure is an electron guide grid which effectively increases the path length of electrons and enhances the ionization rate of the background neutral gas into plasma. As seen in Fig. 3, the sphere of the electron guide grid does not extend over the entire device.
- a section of the electron guide grid is cut out near the plasma jet hole through which the plasma jet escapes the device.
- the voltage on the outer grid 116 must be selected to optimize ion generation, and may be in a range of - 0.1 kV to -30 kV, and may operate with an electrical current of 0.005 to 2,000 amps.
- the accelerating voltage must be kept at a level (e.g., 1 kV) to ensure that the resultant exhaust velocity will be close to a desired level (e.g., 30,000 m/s, where the specific impulse is less than 3,000 seconds).
- a gaseous propellant 122 which may be xenon or other comparable material, is bled into the chamber through holes 123 at appropriate locations around the wall of the vessel 111.
- Electron emitters 125 are attached close to the jet discharge hole 114 to ensure complete neutralization. Additional electron emitters are situated on the inside of the device, attached to the outer ground sphere, with the emitter coils/guns positioned in the space between the wall of the outer sphere and the electron guide grid 116.
- a central core 128 is the location of highest concentration of the ions and acts as the source for the plasma jet 117 that is emitted by the source.
- the IEC source that has been disclosed would use a propellant comprising xenon, having a molecular weight of 131.3 amu. This gas is selected because of its relatively high mass combined with its ease of ionization, but substitute gases such as cesium, argon, hydrogen, helium, methane, deuterium, and even nitrogen may also be used. Where a carbon-based gas such as methane is used, the jet may contain microparticles, such as fullerenes . As seen in Fig.
- the vessel 111 itself may be made of a conductive material such as stainless steel, while the electron guide 116, the accelerating grid 114 and the cylindrical grid guide 115 may be made of materials such as stainless steel, tantalum, tungsten molybdenum or vanadium having characteristics such as high melting point, high secondary electron coefficient, low electrical resistivity, high thermal conductivity and low sputtering yield.
- Non- conductive vessel materials also may be used, but additional grids are required.
- the device On the basis of a -1 kV source 119 and a +100 V source 126, the device may develop a specific impulse of 3,000 s with a thrust of 34 mN and a jet power of 500 W.
- the IEC device will have higher densities and temperatures in the central core plasma than those that are encountered in planar thrusters, but the corresponding increase in radiation losses due to the higher bremsstrahlung rates under these conditions will still be negligible. Thermal radiation losses are expected to be comparable to those of planar plasma devices.
- ions and electrons are recirculated before being ejected, and the ionization region is more effectively localized with the multiple grid system, providing better efficiency for the energy expended per full-speed exhaust ion. In consideration of these factors, , the energy expenditure per ion (power loss from ionization of the propellant) is less than the estimated 300 eV per ion for planar thrusters.
- Figure 4 is an illustration of the star mode which is present in an IEC device. This illustration shows the development of microchannels through the central grid openings, the microchannels extending from the central core region through the grid to the vessel walls .
- Figure 5 is a photograph that illustrates a plasma jet formed in a device having an IEC thruster configuration.
- the multiple microchannels are only faintly visible, while the plasma jet is focused through the spherical grid region from the central core to the vacuum chamber wall of the vessel. Provision of an appropriate opening in the chamber wall would permit a flow of the jet outside of the vessel to provide a thrust. Such operation is easily done in space where an external vacuum naturally exists, but on earth, a mechanism to prevent back flow of air into the jet would be required.
- FIG. 6 is a photograph that illustrates the ionization process in an IEC thruster 300.
- the thruster comprises a grounded vessel 311 which has an opening 322 for insertion of a propellant gas and an exit port 312 for the projection of a plasma jet 317.
- a spherical negative acceleration grid 313 is provided at the center of the vessel while a positive grid electron guide 316 is disposed concentrically around the negative acceleration grid, close to the vessel wall.
- the cylindrical guide grid is not shown for ease of illustration.
- an electron emitter 321 will generate electrons which flow along the positive grid electron guide from source locations 350 to intermediate points 351 along the guide.
- the electrons As the electrons flow along the guide, they will oscillate as a result of the action of the voltages and will produce positive ions 354, via ionization collisions with the background gas.
- the ionized particles 354 will flow under control of the internal field created by the two grids through the center 356 of the vessel.
- the positive ions return to a potential surface corresponding to the potential value at their point of birth. At that point, all of their kinetic energy has been transformed to potential energy. Thus, their motion stops and they reverse direction, being accelerated back towards the center of the vessel. Then, they return again to the center of the vessel for further action.
- the design for the inertial electrostatic confinement source is not limited to- a spherical design, but may have a cylindrical, elliptical or other design.
- the cylindrical design is based upon the use of a plasma target created at the center of the chamber by the intersection of multiple ion beams.
- Using other geometric designs, such as cylindrical designs a similar approach to the creation of ion streams and the deflection of the ions into a thrusting plasma jet would provide a similar result.
- Such designs would promise good efficiency, low weight and, due to very open accelerator grid structure, a long lifetime.
- Any viable source of on-board stored, collected or generated electric power may be conditioned to provide the required voltages and currents.
- the apparatus for producing a single narrow plasma jet may be a 32- cm diameter vacuum chamber having therein a 5-cm diameter grid comprised of a hexagonal hole with diameter 2.5 cm, 12 equilateral triangles with 2.5-cm sides, and 12 equilateral triangles with 1.5-cm sides, 3 to 5 millitorr Argon gas chamber pressure, 1 to 3 kV grid voltage, and 1 to 60 mA electrode current.
- the single narrow plasma jet emerges through the hexagonal hole in the grid.
- the hole may be diamond shaped by removing one structural element from between two adjacent triangular grid holes.
- Another embodiment comprises a 31-cm diameter vacuum chamber having therein a 7.5-cm diameter electrical grid.
- the grid pattern involves a pattern of circuit holes of average diameter about 0.9-cm, but with one 1.8-cm diameter enlarged circular hole.
- a 10 to 20 mA electrode current and 1 to 5 kV are applied to create a single narrow plasma jet which emerges through the enlarged circular hole in the grid.
- a further design produces six individual narrow plasma jets with the following design configuration and operational conditions. Specifically, there is a 31-cm diameter vacuum chamber, a 3-ring ellipsoid electrical grid with a 6- cm minor axis and 8-cm major axis with a geometric transparency of 95%, 1 to 10 millitorr Argon gas chamber pressure, 20-30 kV grid voltage and 5-15 Ma electrode current.
- the apparatus can be configured to produce one dominant jet and a minor diametrically opposed jet under the following design configuration and operating conditions.
- a grid consisting of 7 rings of 0.2-mm thick 35-mm O.D. 29-mm I.D. assembled to create a spherical grid with 3 rings that intersect at the north and south poles .
- the remaining 4 rings are arranged to establish a recurring uniform pattern of triangular- holes.
- the anode chamber wall has a 230-mm inside diameter.
- a 7 - 9 x 10 ⁇ -3 m bar pressure of gas is provided in the chamber, with current of 10-40 mA, and a voltage of 5-15 kV.
- the jet exits via the largest triangular hole.
- the IEC JET may be configured similarly for industrial applications.
- the IEC jet source unit would be accommodated within a larger volume vacuum vessel that would also accommodate the target or targets to which the plasma or neutral particle jet would be applied.
- the IEC jet unit may be fixed in one position and the targets moved into the jet strike zone or the IEC jet unit may be moved by robotic actuators to spray coat the targets which would be mounted for optimal coating quality.
- the use of the IEC plasma jet for industrial and scientific applications, where a plasma spray, vapor deposition, or intense plasma heating is required, is exemplified in Figure 7, which is an illustration of the IEC plasma jet 417 being used for plasma processing of a single stationary target.
- a single target 420, or an array of targets set upon a rotating turntable 422 are placed in a large vacuum chamber 423 attached to the main IEC device vacuum chamber 411.
- the IEC plasma jet 417 first passes through a hole 414 in grid 413 and then through hole 412 in the IEC vacuum chamber wall 411 and hits the target.
- Multiple access ports 421 are situated about the plasma processing chamber 423 for changing out the plasma targets. Valves (e.g., 421A, 421B) are used on some of the access ports for controlling the vacuum of the plasma processing chamber.
- the IEC jet unit could be located within a commercial spray or etch unit. The jet would be directed as desired on the target material.
- the IEC jet device may use a pulsed power supply 640 in parallel with a steady- state DC power supply 641, and such arrangement is shown in Figure 9.
- the outer conductor 611 is connected to ground and the pulsed power supply 640 provides high voltage or high-current pulses to the cathode grid 613.
- Pulsing of the IEC device while operating in either "halo" or “star” modes has been publicly disclosed (Yibin Gu, George Miley, "Pulsed IEC Neutron Generator," 10 th IEEE International Pulsed Power Conference, Albuquerque, NM, 10-13 July 1995. pp. 3-5); however, the pulsing of the IEC device while operating in jet mode has not previously been disclosed and results in the generation of a pulsed plasma jet 617.
- the pulsed IEC plasma jet differs from pulsing the "halo" or “star” modes in that the minimum pulse length that must be used is a factor of 2 or more than that required for the "halo" or “star” modes, which typically need a minimum pulse length on the order of the ion bounce time, the time for the ion to circulate through the device.
- Conventional pulse power supplies using solid state or plasma switches may be used in this application.
- IEC plasma jet source having a grounded external confinement vessel 711 is one in Fig. 10 that uses fusion reactions created by the confinement of the IEC device to increase the power level of the plasma jet and to provide electrical power for keeping the thruster operating, thereby eliminating the need for an external power supply that derives its energy from photo-voltaic panels, or a nuclear fission power reactor.
- deuterium and helium-3 fusion fuels are confined by the cathode grid 713 and subsequent virtual electrodes that form in the core of the IEC device.
- a plasma jet 717 of energetic fusion products escapes out a hole 712 in the IEC device and provides a high- power, high specific impulse jet.
- Energetic fusion products that don't escape out the hole are collected on floating spherical grids 770 within the IEC device chamber which build up high positive voltages.
- This system of collector grids 770 allows direct conversion of fusion energy into electrical energy.
- An external power processing unit 740 converts the high positive voltage (1 to 15 MV) electricity from the collector grids into a lower negative voltage (-10 to -100 kV) , and this is fed back into the cathode grid to keep the device operating.
- the positively-biased collector grids 770 will act as electron guide grids to localize the ionization of the background neutral gas, and to accelerate fusion fuel ions (ionized deuterium and helium-3) back into the core of the IEC jet thruster device.
- hydrogen gas 760 is mixed in with the plasma jet exhaust 717, and external field magnets 750 can be used to help confine the mixed plasma jet exhaust if necessary.
- This fusion-assisted mode of operation of the IEC jet device is different from both Bussard' s concept for an IEC fusion thruster ( Bussard et al .
- Fig. 11 shows another embodiment of the IEC plasma jet source having a grounded external confinement vessel 811 that contains a grid 813 and produces a jet 817 through a hole 814 in the vessel 811 is one that uses fission reactions created by the flux of neutrons ⁇ from an IEC device that uses fusion reactions to release the neutrons.
- the fusion neutrons resulting from the deuterium- deuterium or deuterium-tritium reactions will escape from the IEC containment vessel.
- a mantle of fissionable material 850 is arranged within a container 830 to substantially surround the IEC device.
- the preferred fissionable material is Thourium because it is considered to be a more acceptable fissionable material than uranium or plutonium isotope mixtures.
- the concept of the IEC neutron generator as a source of supplemental neutrons for the co-called sub-critical thourium reactor has been patented by H.H. Hora .
- the sub- critical thorium reactor can be started after a successful delivery to Low Earth Orbit.
- the IEC device is first started by means of an electrical energy storage or solar photovoltaic or chemical gas generator and turbine system to generate a supplementary flux of neutrons that will sustain a fission chain reaction within the Thourium.
- the consequential heat of the thorium mantle is transferred to a thermal working fluid in a coolant loop system 840 using heat exchanger methods that are well known in the field of thermal systems engineering.
- the heat can be used to generate a gas phase such as steam that can drive a turbine generator 870 set to produce electricity.
- Suitable electric power conditioning equipment 890 that is well known m the electrical engineering field can be adapted to provide the driving power for the IEC fusion neutron generator and plasma jet combination.
- the sub-critical reactor heat may also be using in part to preheat rocket propellant for higher thrust augmentation.
- Such an embodiment presents a reduced set of demands on development effort because the Iec fusion reaction rate performance requirement is less than for a self sustained fusion power system and the IEC Jet propulsion would be a logical progression for a systemmatic development of a spaceflight qualified IEC supplemented sub-critical fission reactor electric power source.
- a propellant for thrust augmentation 860 can be supplied to the jet 817 in a manner previously discussed. While the present invention has been described in connection with several preferred embodiments, the invention is not limited thereto, and its scope is to be defined by the following claims.
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (8)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US1997/019306 WO1998019817A1 (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma |
EP97948125A EP0938396A4 (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma |
JP52148498A JP2001511937A (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma |
IL12960897A IL129608A0 (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma |
AU54257/98A AU5425798A (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement dischar ge plasma |
US09/297,505 US6121569A (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma |
CN97199358A CN1235569A (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using internal electrostatic confinement discharge plasma |
CA002268456A CA2268456A1 (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma |
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
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US3000996P | 1996-11-01 | 1996-11-01 | |
US60/030,009 | 1996-11-01 | ||
PCT/US1997/019306 WO1998019817A1 (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma |
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WO1998019817A1 true WO1998019817A1 (en) | 1998-05-14 |
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PCT/US1997/019306 WO1998019817A1 (en) | 1996-11-01 | 1997-10-31 | Plasma jet source using an inertial electrostatic confinement discharge plasma |
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US (1) | US6121569A (en) |
EP (1) | EP0938396A4 (en) |
JP (1) | JP2001511937A (en) |
CN (1) | CN1235569A (en) |
AU (1) | AU5425798A (en) |
CA (1) | CA2268456A1 (en) |
IL (1) | IL129608A0 (en) |
WO (1) | WO1998019817A1 (en) |
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1997
- 1997-10-31 US US09/297,505 patent/US6121569A/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1997-10-31 JP JP52148498A patent/JP2001511937A/en active Pending
- 1997-10-31 IL IL12960897A patent/IL129608A0/en unknown
- 1997-10-31 AU AU54257/98A patent/AU5425798A/en not_active Abandoned
- 1997-10-31 CA CA002268456A patent/CA2268456A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 1997-10-31 WO PCT/US1997/019306 patent/WO1998019817A1/en not_active Application Discontinuation
- 1997-10-31 EP EP97948125A patent/EP0938396A4/en not_active Withdrawn
- 1997-10-31 CN CN97199358A patent/CN1235569A/en active Pending
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Cited By (13)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP0951440A1 (en) * | 1997-01-13 | 1999-10-27 | George Miley | Method and apparatus for producing complex carbon molecules |
EP0951440A4 (en) * | 1997-01-13 | 2000-03-15 | Daimlerchrysler Aerospace Ag | Method and apparatus for producing complex carbon molecules |
US6922455B2 (en) * | 2002-01-28 | 2005-07-26 | Starfire Industries Management, Inc. | Gas-target neutron generation and applications |
ES2224848A1 (en) * | 2003-05-07 | 2005-03-01 | Jesus Arteaga Diaz | Spaceship deuterium fusion reactor powered motor includes porous palladium cathode and platinum anode in magnetized vessel |
US7584601B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2009-09-08 | Metcalfe Iii Tristram Walker | Charged particle thrust engine |
WO2007008234A3 (en) * | 2004-09-03 | 2008-11-20 | Tristram Walker Metcalfe Iii | Charged particle thrust engine |
US8112982B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2012-02-14 | Metcalfe Iii Tristram Walker | Charged particle thrust engine |
WO2007095680A1 (en) * | 2006-02-24 | 2007-08-30 | Jozef Goj | System to propel fluid matter in an elongate flow tube |
US8604417B2 (en) | 2011-08-26 | 2013-12-10 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Targetless pulsed neutron generator using beam-beam interaction |
US8921769B2 (en) | 2011-08-26 | 2014-12-30 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Multiposition target plane for variable source-detector distance using DD, DT sealed neutron source |
JP2017091710A (en) * | 2015-11-06 | 2017-05-25 | 株式会社東芝 | Nuclear fusion neutron generation device, and nuclear fusion neutron generation method |
EP3242534A1 (en) * | 2016-05-04 | 2017-11-08 | Gradel | Apparatus for generating a plasma jet, in particular for space propulsion |
US11856683B2 (en) | 2021-03-22 | 2023-12-26 | N.T. Tao Ltd. | High efficiency plasma creation system and method |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EP0938396A4 (en) | 2001-07-25 |
CN1235569A (en) | 1999-11-17 |
JP2001511937A (en) | 2001-08-14 |
EP0938396A1 (en) | 1999-09-01 |
CA2268456A1 (en) | 1998-05-14 |
US6121569A (en) | 2000-09-19 |
IL129608A0 (en) | 2000-02-29 |
AU5425798A (en) | 1998-05-29 |
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