Title :
A Planar Array of Micro-Fabricated Electrospray Emitters for Thruster Applications
Author :
Velásquez-García, Luis Fernando ; Akinwande, Akintunde Ibitayo ; Sánchez, Manuel Martínez
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Aeronaut. & Astronaut., MIT, Cambridge, MA
Abstract :
This paper reports the design, fabrication, and experimental characterization of a planar array of micro-fabricated electrospray emitters intended for space propulsion applications in micro-satellites. The engine uses the ionic liquid EMI-BF4 as propellant. Electrospray engines take advantage of the electrohydrodynamic effect known as Taylor cone to produce thrust. The array is designed with an open architecture and it is composed of a set of spikes, i.e., emitters, coming out from a propellant pool. There are two configurations for the emitters: fully sharpened slender emitters, i.e., pencils, and truncated pyramidal emitters, i.e., volcanoes. The arrays have between 4 and 1024 emitters in an active area of 0.64 cm2. The surface of the engine (tank and emitters) is covered with "black silicon" that acts as wicking material. The micro-fabrication of the engine is described. The paper reports experimental characterization of the hydraulics system including wettability tests, current/emitter-voltage characteristics, and imprints of the exit stream on a collector. Preliminary results demonstrating the feasibility of obtaining substantially larger emission currents at the same extraction voltage by controlling the temperature are also reported. The paper compares the experimental current/emitter-voltage characteristics with relevant theories of field emission of electrons
Keywords :
aerospace propulsion; artificial satellites; electrohydrodynamics; hydraulic systems; microfluidics; sprays; Taylor cone; electrohydrodynamic effect; electrospray engines; ionic liquid EMI-BF4 propellant; micro-fabricated electrospray emitters; micro-satellites; space propulsion applications; thruster applications; Electrohydrodynamics; Engines; Fabrication; Hydraulic systems; Planar arrays; Propulsion; Silicon; System testing; Temperature control; Volcanoes; Black silicon; electrospray emitter array; ionic liquid propellant; propulsion;
Journal_Title :
Microelectromechanical Systems, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JMEMS.2006.879710