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Arcjet rocket

About: Arcjet rocket is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1121 publications have been published within this topic receiving 9687 citations. The topic is also known as: Arcjet.


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R. L. Poeschel1
01 Jul 1983
TL;DR: Inert gas ion thruster technology offers the greatest potential for providing high specific impulse, low thrust, electric propulsion on large, Earth orbital spacecraft as discussed by the authors, and the development of a thruster module that can be operated on xenon or argon propellant to produce 0.2 N of thrust at a specific impulse of 3000 sec with xenon and at 6000 sec with argon.
Abstract: Inert gas ion thruster technology offers the greatest potential for providing high specific impulse, low thrust, electric propulsion on large, Earth orbital spacecraft. The development of a thruster module that can be operated on xenon or argon propellant to produce 0.2 N of thrust at a specific impulse of 3000 sec with xenon propellant and at 6000 sec with argon propellant is described. The 30 cm diameter, laboratory model thruster is considered to be scalable to produce 0.5 N thrust. A high efficiency ring cusp discharge chamber was used to achieve an overall thruster efficiency of 77% with xenon propellant and 66% with argon propellant. Measurements were performed to identify ion production and loss processes and to define critical design criteria (at least on a preliminary basis).

13 citations

Patent
23 Apr 1959

13 citations

01 Jan 1987
TL;DR: In this article, two propulsion systems have been selected for the space station: gaseous H/O rockets for high thrust applications and the multipropellant resistojets for low thrust needs.
Abstract: Two propulsion systems have been selected for the space station: gaseous H/O rockets for high thrust applications and the multipropellant resistojets for low thrust needs. These two thruster systems integrate very well with the fluid systems on the space station, utilizing waste fluids as their source of propellant. The H/O rocket will be fueled by electrolyzed water and the resistojets will use waste gases collected from the environmental control system and the various laboratories. The results are presented of experimental efforts with H/O and resistojet thrusters to determine their performance and life capability, as well as results of studies to determine the availability of water and waste gases.

13 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
24 Jul 1999
TL;DR: Water Rocket is the collective name for an integrated set of technologies that offer new options for spacecraft propulsion, power, energy storage, and structure as discussed by the authors, which can be used for new classes of spacecraft, such as microsats, nanosats, and refuelable spacecraft.
Abstract: Water Rocket is the collective name for an integrated set of technologies that offer new options for spacecraft propulsion, power, energy storage, and structure. Low pressure water stored on the spacecraft is electrolyzed to generate, separate, and pressurize gaseous hydrogen and oxygen. These gases, stored in lightweight pressure tanks, can be burned to generate thrust or recombined to produce electric power. As a rocket propulsion system, Water Rocket provides the highest feasible chemical specific impulse (-400 seconds). Even higher specific impulse propulsion can be achieved by combining Water Rocket with other advanced propulsion technologies, such as arcjet or electric thrusters. With innovative pressure tank technology, Water Rocket's specific energy [Wh/kg] can exceed that of the best foreseeable batteries by an order of magnitude, and the tanks can often serve as vehicle structural elements. For pulsed power applications, Water Rocket propellants can be used to drive very high power density generators, such as MHD devices or detonation-driven pulse generators. A space vehicle using Water Rocket propulsion can be totally inert and non-hazardous during assembly and launch. These features are particularly important for the timely development and flight qualification of new classes of spacecraft, such as microsats, nanosats, and refuelable spacecraft.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present computational analysis in support of experiments in a high enthalpy arcjet wind tunnel at NASA Ames Research Center, including surface temperature measurements of swept-wing leading edge shaped pylon models.
Abstract: This paper reports computational analysis in support of experiments in a high enthalpy arcjet wind tunnel at NASA Ames Research Center. These experiments were conducted in the NASA Ames 60-MW Interaction Heating Facility and include surface temperature measurements of swept-wing leading edge shaped pylon models. Surface temperatures of the arcjet pylon models were measured with thermocouples, an infrared camera, and a pyrometer. During the facility characterization runs, surface pressure and heat flux measurements on a water-cooled calibration plate were obtained. The present analysis comprises computational simulations of the nonequilibrium flowfield in the facility (the nozzle and the test box) and comparisons with the experimental measurements. The value of computational fluid dynamics simulations in planning and analysis of a complex arcjet test configuration is demonstrated.

13 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202315
202211
20215
202010
20193
201811