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Published July 9, 2018 | public
Book Section - Chapter

Determination of the work function distribution of a LaB_6 hollow cathode based on plasma potential measurement and 2D plasma numerical simulation

Abstract

Self-heating hollow cathodes are central components in modern electric thrusters. The plasma discharge inside these devices heats the internal components, thus maintaining the temperatures required for electron emission. Precise knowledge of the physical phenomena governing hollow cathode operation is key to predict their lifetime, specifically, their thermionic emission characteristics. A simulation platform has been built to couple plasma and thermal models of the self-heating hollow cathode to produce a self-consistent solution. A self-consistent solution has been found for a LaB_6 hollow cathode operating at 25A and 13 sccm where the work function is assumed to be spatially uniform along the emitter with a value which is allowed to vary as the coupled model iterates to a self-consistent solution. The emitter temperature from the converged solution does not agree with experimental temperature measurements, however. The results of a sensitivity analysis suggest that none of the tolerances in the measurement are responsible for the discrepancy. We hypothesize that either the work function needs to be a function of position along the emitting surfaces or the heat fluxes have been overestimated in the plasma solver.

Additional Information

© 2018 American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023