The next-generation ion engine that may one day send American astronauts to Mars has passed a major milestone. Working in coordination with NASA engineers from Glenn Research and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Aerojet Rocketdyne says it has completed its early systems integration test of the Advanced Electric Propulsion System (AEPS) 13-kW Hall thruster that is it building for NASA, clearing the way for further development.
A
major hurdle for NASA's ambitions to return to the Moon and to mount
manned deep space missions is the required propulsion system. Chemical
rockets are already at the outer edge of their theoretical limits and
nuclear thermal engines are still primitive and many largely
theoretical. However, recent missions, like NEXT and the Dawn
mission to the asteroid Ceres, have demonstrated that ion thrusters
with their low fuel loads and high efficiency could be a viable
near-term solution as well having wider propulsion applications.
Under
contract, Aerojet Rocketdyne is working on AEPS with an emphasis on the
ion thruster, power processing unit, low-pressure xenon flow
controller, and electrical harness – all of which will be powered by
solar panels once in space. By using what will one day be a 50-kW ion
drive, which uses electrons captured in magnetic fields to ionize xenon
molecules and accelerate them to very high velocities, NASA hopes to
increase thruster efficiency by a factor of 100 and double the thrust of
current electric propulsion systems.
These AEPS thrusters could have a number of applications, most notably for NASA's Gateway manned deep space orbital outpost, as well as for deep space missions, or even the first manned Mars expeditions.
According
to Rocketdyne, the recent tests were of the AEPS Hall thruster's power
elements, which include the discharge supply unit (DSU) and the power
processing unit (PPU). Using breadboard versions of the units hooked up
to a NASA development ion thruster, tests were conducted in a thermal
vacuum chamber at NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio. This
revealed that the DSU and PPU could successfully convert power with high
efficiency and minimal waste heat.
With
the early systems integration tests over, Aerojet Rocketdyne engineers
are moving on to the design finalization and verification phase leading
up to the critical design review (CDR) and eventual production.
"By
staying on the cutting edge of propulsion technology, we have
positioned ourselves for a major role not only in getting back to the
Moon, but also in any future initiative to send people to Mars," says
Eileen Drake, Aerojet Rocketdyne CEO and president. "AEPS is the
vanguard for the next generation of deep space exploration and we're
thrilled to be at the mast.
"Our
AEPS discharge supply unit performed exceptionally, yielding
significant conversion efficiency improvements important for future
demanding missions. These results are a testament to the Aerojet
Rocketdyne team's focus and dedication to advancing the state of the art
in this critical in-space technology area."
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