1 / 33

Antenna in Plasma (AIP) Code

Antenna in Plasma (AIP) Code . Timothy W. Chevalier Umran S. Inan Timothy F. Bell March 4, 2008. Stanford MURI Tasks. Scientific Issues: The sheath surrounding an electric dipole antenna operating in a plasma has a significant effect on the tuning properties.

thora
Télécharger la présentation

Antenna in Plasma (AIP) Code

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Antenna in Plasma (AIP) Code Timothy W. ChevalierUmran S. InanTimothy F. BellMarch 4, 2008

  2. Stanford MURI Tasks Scientific Issues: • The sheath surrounding an electric dipole antenna operating in a plasma has a significant effect on the tuning properties. • Terminal impedance characteristics vary with applied voltage. • Active tuning may be needed. • Stanford has developed a general AIP code to determine sheath effects on radiation process. MURI Tasks: • Validation of our AIP code by laboratory experiments using LAPD. • UCLA will provide time measurements of voltage, current and field patterns for dipole antennas to compare with Stanford model. • Locate sources of error in current model and identify means for improvement. • Perform LAPD experiments on magnetic loop antennas.

  3. Outline • Introduction • Cold Plasma Electromagnetic Model • Current Distribution and Impedance Results • Warm Plasma Electrostatic Model • Plasma Sheath Results

  4. Coupling Regions ( ( ( ) ) ) ¸ ¸ ¸ R R R R À ¿ ¼ i m n Sheath Region • Near field • Reactive Energy (ES) • Highly nonlinear Warm Plasma Region • Transition zone • Reactive/Radiated Energy (EM & ES) • Nonlinear effects still important Cold Plasma Region • Far field • Radiated Energy (EM) • Linear environment ES: Electrostatic EM: Electromagnetic

  5. Modeling Methodology ~ ~ ( ) F E B + £ v q = · ¸ @ f F P ( ) f f r r 0 + + ½ v ¢ ¢ = ~ ® r v ® r E @ t ¢ m = ² o ~ ( ~ ~ d E P r H J £ + ² = N ® o d t ~ ~ d H r E £ ¡ ¹ = o d t • Near field antenna characteristics • Electrically short dipole antennas • ES & EM approaches (Poisson/Maxwell)-Vlasov Formulation (Lorentz Force) (Poisson) (Maxwell)

  6. Moments of Vlasov Equation · ¸ @ f F 8 ( ) d F v v m ( ) ( ) f f F r r + + v v ¢ ¢ > = r v > h l i @ t t ´ v p a s e s p a c e v e o c y > ( ) m d Z Z Z F < v v v m h t n M = ° l i t [ ] [ ] ( ) ( ) ´ u a v e r a g e o w v e o c y d F ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ v u v u v u v u m > > v [ ] > d l d h l i i t t t t ¡ [ ] [ ] [ ] ( ) ( ) d ´ F c v u r a n o m v e o c y u e o e r m a m o o n s : = ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ v u v u v u v u v u m Nth moment

  7. Fluid Representation of Plasma ( ) ( ) @ r 0 + ¢ u n m n m = t l b d ¯ l d E i i t t t ´ ´ n n u m e e e c r r c e n s e y v e c o r ( ) ( ) ( ) @ P E B r 0 + + ¡ + £ u ¢ u u u n m n m n q = t ° ¯ l l d B i i t t t t ´ ´ u a v e m r a a g g e n e o w c v e e o c v e y c v o e r c o r ( ) ( ) f ( ) g s y m @ P P Q P P r r ­ 0 + + + + £ ¢ u ¢ u = t c P t 1 ´ ´ m p r e m s s a u s r s e e n s o r ( ) ( ) f ( ) ( ) g s y m @ Q Q R Q Q P P r r ­ r 0 + + + + £ ¡ ¢ v ¢ u ¢ = t c h h ° Q t t n m ´ ´ q e c a a r g u e x e n s o r f R ­ t t t ´ ´ r - m g o y m r e o n r e q e u n e s n o c r y v e c o r c d P t t u e n s o r p r o u c = Fluid Moments (0th: mass density) (1st: momentum).. (2nd:pressure)...... (3rd:heat flux)…… Additional Variables Fluid Variables

  8. Outline • Introduction • Cold Plasma Electromagnetic Model • Current Distribution and Impedance Results • Warm Plasma Electrostatic Model • Plasma Sheath Results

  9. Cold Plasma Fluid Approximation ~ ( ) ( ) d J @ r 0 + ³ ´ q ¢ u n m n m = ~ ~ ~ ~ t k P T 0 ® ® J E J B n + = = + £ º q n = ® ® ® ® ® o d t ( ) ( ) ( ) @ r P E B 0 + + ¡ m + £ u ¢ u u u n m n m n q = ® t ( ) ( ) f ( ) g s y m @ P r P Q P r ­ P 0 + + + + £ ¢ u ¢ u = t c 1 ( ) ( ) f ( ) ( ) g s y m @ Q r Q R Q r ­ Q P r P 0 + + + + £ ¡ ¢ v ¢ u ¢ = t c n m Fluid Description: Closure Assumption: Generalized Ohms Law

  10. Finite Difference Time and Frequency Domain Techniques (FDTD/FDFD) ~ X ~ ~ ~ d E r H E E j X £ + ~ ~ ¾ ² ! = r H J £ + ® o ² = ® o d t N N ~ ~ r E H j £ ¡ ~ ¹ ! = d H o ~ Frequency Domain (FDFD) r E £ ¡ ¹ = o d t 1 ¡ ~ 2 ( ) I ­ j d J ¡ ¾ ² ! ! ³ ´ = q ~ ~ ~ ~ ® o ® ® p J E J B + + £ º q n = ® ® ® ® ® o d 0 1 t m ¡ ¡ º ! ! ® b b z y ­ ¡ ¡ ! º ! = b b @ A z x ¡ ¡ ! ! º b b y x Time Domain (FDTD) FDTD Method: • Time domain solution of Maxwell’s equations. • Wide spread use in EM community Computational Mesh: Solves: Ax=B

  11. Outline • Introduction • Cold Plasma Electromagnetic Model • Current Distribution and Impedance Results • Warm Plasma Electrostatic Model • Plasma Sheath Results

  12. Cold Plasma Simulation Setup Computational Domain: Antenna Properties • Length: 100 m • Diameter: 20 cm • Orientation: Perpendicular to Bo • Position: Equatorial Plane

  13. Current Distribution for 100 m Antenna in Freespace ¸ ¸ L ¿ L = · µ ¶ ¸ L 2 2 ¼ I I i § / s n z o ¸ 2 Current distribution on linear antenna Excitation frequency: 10 kHz

  14. Current Distributions for 100 m Antenna at L=2 Excitation frequency: f < fLHR Excitation frequency: f > fLHR

  15. Simulation vs. Theory ~ R ( ) d l ( ) E f V ¢ f d e e Z = = i n ~ ( ) f I H ( ) d l H ¢ f d e e Previous Analytical Work Input Impedance Formula [Wang and Bell., 1969,1970] [Wang., 1970] [Bell et. al., 2006] L=2 L=3

  16. Conclusions Based upon Cold Plasma Approximation • Current distribution is triangular for cases demonstrated. • This result supports triangular assumption made in early analytical work. • Input impedance does not vary significantly as a function of frequency • The same antenna can be used over a broad frequency range; self tuning property. • Early analytical work should provide accurate estimates of radiation pattern of dipole antennas in a magnetoplasma [Wang and Bell., 1972]. • What about the Sheath?

  17. Outline • Introduction • Cold Plasma Electromagnetic Model • Current Distribution and Impedance Results • Warm Plasma Electrostatic Model • Plasma Sheath Results

  18. Warm Plasma Fluid Approximation ( ( ) ) ( ( ) ) @ @ r r 0 0 + + ¢ ¢ u u n n m m n n m m = = t t k P Q r T 0 ¢ n = = ( ( ) ) ( ( ) ) ( ( ) ) @ @ P P E E B B r r 0 0 + + + + ¡ ¡ + + £ £ u u ¢ ¢ u u u u u u n n m m n n m m n n q q = = t t ( ( ) ) ( ( ) ) f f ( ( ) ) g g s s y y m m @ @ P P P P Q Q P P P P r r r r ­ ­ 0 0 + + + + + + + + £ £ ¢ ¢ u u ¢ ¢ u u = = t t c c 1 1 ( ( ) ) ( ( ) ) f f ( ( ) ) ( ( ) ) g g s s y y m m @ @ Q Q Q Q R R Q Q Q Q P P P P r r r r ­ ­ r r 0 0 + + + + + + + + £ £ ¡ ¡ ¢ ¢ v v ¢ ¢ u u ¢ ¢ = = t t c c n n m m Isothermal Approximation (2-moments) Closure Assumption: Adiabatic Approximation (3-moments) Closure Assumption:

  19. Electrostatic Approximation ¸ i m n ¸ Constant Voltage L ¿ P ½ ~ ® ® r E ¢ = ² o Triangular current distribution Nonlinear EquationsTime domain approach Sheath region < Electrostatic approach is valid Poisson’s Equation • Removes EM time-stepping constraint • Avoids problems associated with PML

  20. Outline • Introduction • Cold Plasma Electromagnetic Model • Current Distribution and Impedance Results • Warm Plasma Electrostatic Model • Plasma Sheath Results

  21. Warm Plasma Simulation Setup(2-D) m i k P Q r T 2 0 0 0 ¢ n = = = m e Computational Domain: Antenna Properties • Length: Infinite in z-direction • Diameter: 10 cm • Position: Equatorial Plane Plasma Properties • L=2: • N = 2e9 #/m3 • fpe = 400 kHz • fpi = 28 kHz • fce = 110 kHz • fci = 550 Hz • L=3: • N = 1e9 #/m3 • fpe = 284 kHz • fpi = 20 kHz • fce = 33 kHz • fci = 163 Hz Fluid closure relations: • Isothermal (2 - moments) • Adiabatic (3 - moments) Mass ratio:

  22. Simulation of Infinite Line Source Plane of symmetry: Simulation Properties • 25 kHz sinusoid • f>fpi • No magnetic field

  23. Simulation of Infinite Line Source Simulation Properties • 25 kHz sinusoid • f>fpi • No magnetic field Plane of symmetry:

  24. Simulation of Infinite Line Source Simulation Properties • 25 kHz sinusoid • f>fpi • No magnetic field Plane of symmetry:

  25. IV Characteristics (Sinusoid) 15 kHz (f < fpi) 25 kHz (f > fpi) Non-magnetized Non-magnetized Magnetized Magnetized

  26. IV Characteristics (Pulse) 15 kHz (f < fpi) 25 kHz (f > fpi) Non-magnetized Non-magnetized Magnetized Magnetized

  27. Warm Plasma Simulation Setup(3-D) m i 2 0 0 = m e Computational Domain: Antenna Properties • Length: 20 m • Gap: 2 m • Diameter: 10 cm • Position: Equatorial Plane • Electron gun (removes charge) Plasma Properties • L=2: • N = 2e9 #/m3 • fpe = 400 kHz • fpi = 28 kHz • fce = 110 kHz • fci = 550 Hz • L=3: • N = 1e9 #/m3 • fpe = 284 kHz • fpi = 20 kHz • fce = 33 kHz • fci = 163 Hz Mass ratio: Adiabatic (full pressure tensor)

  28. Simulation of 20 m Dipole at L=3 Orthographic Projection Potential and Density Variation Current-Voltage Gap Current

  29. Simulation of 20 m Dipole at L=3 with 20 cm Gap Orthographic Projection Potential and Density Variation Current-Voltage Gap Current

  30. Simulation of 20 m Dipole at L=3 without Electron Gun Orthographic Projection Potential and Density Variation Current-Voltage Gap Current

  31. Circuit Diagrams Tuning Circuit Diagram of Sheath Impedance:

  32. Conclusions Based upon Sheath Calculations • Sheath structure is periodic with both sinusoid and pulse waveform excitation. • Sheath is a quasi-steady state structure. • Proton densities vary significantly throughout sheath region and contribute to current collection. • Commonly used assumption of immobile protons within sheath region for frequencies above and below proton plasma frequency is not necessarily accurate. • Most notable in case of floating antenna.

  33. Validity of Fluid Code for Sheath Region • Ma and Schunk [1992], Thiemann et al. [1992]:Compared PIC and 2-moment fluid codes with diagonal pressure tensors surrounding spherical electrodes stepped to 10,000V. • Noisy PIC simulations agreed with results of fluid code with addition of more particles • Under-sampled distribution functions in PIC code are inherently noisy. • Plasma ringing and double layer formation was captured in both fluid and PIC simulations. • Very good qualitative agreement • Borovsky [1988], Calder and Laframboise[1990], Calder et al. [1993]: PIC simulations of spherical electrodes stepped to very large potentials. • Calder and Laframboise [1990], noted ringing effects could be driven to large amplitude by ion-electron two steam instability which a fluid code can capture. • No presence of electron-electron two-stream instability in any of the PIC simulations • Landau damping is negligible since the phase velocity of waves within the sheath region are generally different than thermal velocities. • No need to capture this effect in fluid code. • Though particle trapping within sheath is possible (mainly slow moving ions), the relatively small number of trapped particles results a minimal deviation of the potential variation within the sheath. • A fluid code can provide an accurate and more computationally efficient method for the determination of sheath characteristics!

More Related