Space

Satellite fires up iodine-fueled ion thruster for the first time

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The iodine-fueled ion engine firing
Thrustme
The iodine-fueled ion engine firing
Thrustme
Beihangkonshi-1

In a development that could help slow the proliferation of space junk, the orbit of a communications satellite has for the first time been altered using solid iodine as a propellant. The Beihangkonshi-1 smallsat made the maneuver earlier this month using a self-contained NPT30-I2 electric propulsion system developed by French startup Thrustme.

Built by Spacety Luxembourg and launched on November 6, 2020 atop a CZ-6 Long March 6 rocket from Taiyuan, China, Beihangkonshi-1 is a technology demonstrator satellite that's designed to test multi-beam, multi-channel automatic surveillance-broadcast communication systems as a way to provide continuous global aircraft tracking, as well as communication and intervention for air traffic control systems.

That's a pretty standard sort of small satellite, but it suffers from the same problem as other bread loaf-sized spacecraft, which is that they are too small to carry the heavy, complex propulsion systems that conventional satellites use for station keeping, attitude control, and end-of-life disposal.

To overcome this, Thrustme, a spin-off company from the École Polytechnique and the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), with the support of ESA, has developed a modular ion thruster system that is much smaller and simpler than conventional systems, as well as having the ability to operate using onboard algorithms.

Beihangkonshi-1

The NPT30-I2 electric propulsion system dispenses with liquid propellants in favor of a plug of iodine, which is solid at room temperature. Aside from not needing any valves or plumbing to move the propellant about, solid iodine doesn't slosh like liquids do, is much denser than liquids, and can be configured into any needed geometry for storage.

The reason why iodine was chosen is familiar to any high-school chemistry student. When iodine crystals are heated, they don't melt and then boil, Instead, they directly flash into a purple gas. This is not only an impressive school lab experiment, it's also very useful for space propulsion.

The ion propellant comes pre-loaded in the NPT30-I2. When the engine is brought on line, the plug is heated and sublimates into gas. The iodine molecules are then given an electric charge and accelerated by a grid, producing up to 1.1 mN of thrust and a specific impulse of up to 2,400 seconds.

The new bolt-on system could be used to make CubeSats that reenter the Earth's atmosphere at the end of their missions, meaning less space junk. They could also be boosted to higher altitudes for longer missions. This could be especially useful for the project constellations of CubeSats that will one day be used for agricultural monitoring or internet access.

Source: ESA

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6 comments
FB36
Since photons carryaway momentum, any bright light source in space could act like a thruster!
So how about doing R&D on using panels of white LEDs (for example) as thrusters?
Karmudjun
FB36 - you have to be kidding right?
David, Great article about a solution to THE INCREASE in the amount of space junk circulating our planet, I agree the theory that you could let these satellites orbit at a lower level and pop them higher with such a thruster, and eventually when thruster fuel is gone the satellite orbit would decay and the little cube-sat would disentigrate in the atmosphere.
But FB36 - you want to know about the thrust value of emitting photons? Firstly, do you know how infinitesimal planck's constant is? Just pick your wavelength of light emitted by an LED and plug in the numbers.
6.62607004 × 10-34 m2 kg / s (planck;s constant) divided by the wavelength of light gives you one photon's momentum...it holds true for all particles of mass.
That is to the minus 34. How many LEDs do you need to fire up to move a satellite back into orbit?
Check out this link and solve those questions yourself: https://courses.lumenlearning.com/physics/chapter/29-4-photon-momentum/
Nala
Great article
Lamar Havard
Could you mount lasers and reflectors on the satellite to push it, like the little, spinning top-shaped objects they shoot into the air with lasers, or would it have a recoil effect, by having the laser mounted on the satellite, counteracting the pull of the reflector?
ChairmanLMAO
Beats solar sailing and the added bonus of depleting the radiation belt with iodine gas!! Win, win!!
ljaques
0.247289838258 pounds-force. It soitenly ain't one of Elon's Falcon 9s, am it? LOL