Spherical collectors versus bare tethers for drag, thrust, and power generation


Autoria(s): Sanmartín Losada, Juan Ramón; Lorenzini, Enrico C.
Data(s)

2006

Resumo

Deorbit, power generation, and thrusting performances of a bare thin-tape tether and an insulated tether with a spherical electron collector are compared for typical conditions in low-Earth orbit and common values of length L = 4−20 km and cross-sectional area of the tether A = 1−5 mm2. The relative performance of moderately large spheres, as compared with bare tapes, improves but still lags as one moves from deorbiting to power generation and to thrusting: Maximum drag in deorbiting requires maximum current and, thus, fully reflects on anodic collection capability, whereas extracting power at a load or using a supply to push current against the motional field requires reduced currents. The relative performance also improves as one moves to smaller A, which makes the sphere approach the limiting short-circuit current, and at greater L, with the higher bias only affecting moderately the already large bare-tape current. For a 4-m-diameter sphere, relative performances range from 0.09 sphere-to-bare tether drag ratio for L = 4 km and A = 5 mm2 to 0.82 thrust–efficiency ratio for L = 20 km and A = 1 mm2. Extremely large spheres collecting the short-circuit current at zero bias at daytime (diameters being about 14 m for A = 1 mm2 and 31 m for A = 5 mm2) barely outperform the bare tape for L = 4 km and are still outperformed by the bare tape for L = 20 km in both deorbiting and power generation; these large spheres perform like the bare tape in thrusting. In no case was sphere or sphere-related hardware taken into account in evaluating system mass, which would have reduced the sphere performances even further.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://oa.upm.es/21740/

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

E.T.S.I. Aeronáuticos (UPM)

Relação

http://oa.upm.es/21740/1/A78.pdf

Direitos

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

IEEE Transactions on plasma science, ISSN 0093-3813, 2006, Vol. 34, No. 5

Palavras-Chave #Aeronáutica #Física
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

Artículo

PeerReviewed