Litcius/Paper detail

Enhancing one-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations to self-consistently resolve instability-induced electron transport in Hall thrusters

Farbod Faraji, Maryam Reza, Aaron Knoll

2022Journal of Applied Physics36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The advent of high-power Hall thrusters and the increasing interest toward their use as a primary propulsion system for various missions have given a new boost to the efforts aiming at self-consistent predictive modeling of this thruster technology. In this article, we present a novel approach, which allows enhancing the predictive capability of one-dimensional particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations to self-consistently capture the wave-induced electron transport due to the azimuthal instabilities in Hall thrusters. The so-called “pseudo-2D” PIC scheme resulting from this approach is extensively tested in several operating conditions. The results are compared against a well-established 2D3V axial–azimuthal reference case in terms of the axial profiles of the time-averaged plasma properties, the azimuthal electric field fluctuations and their dispersion features, and the contributions of the force terms in the electron azimuthal momentum equation to the cross-field mobility. We have demonstrated that the pseudo-2D PIC provides a prediction of the above aspects that compares very closely in almost all conditions with those from the full-2D simulation. In addition, the sensitivity of the pseudo-2D simulation results to the numerical parameters associated with our approach is assessed in detail. The outcomes of these analyses have casted light on the next steps to further improve the approach.

Topics & Concepts

Particle-in-cellPhysicsAzimuthElectronMomentum (technical analysis)InstabilityHall effectDispersion (optics)Computational physicsDispersion relationField (mathematics)PropulsionMechanicsElectric fieldComputer simulationMagnetic fieldOpticsQuantum mechanicsThermodynamicsFinanceMathematicsEconomicsPure mathematicsPlasma Diagnostics and ApplicationsElectrohydrodynamics and Fluid DynamicsParticle accelerators and beam dynamics