Title: MECHANICAL DESIGN OF PLASMA ANALYSERS
1MECHANICAL DESIGN OF PLASMA ANALYSERS
- J. Coker
- Mullard Space Science Laboratory
2Heritage of MSSL Plasma Analysers
- The Hemispherical Micro Channel Plate (MCP) based
Analysers were developed from earlier versions
with Channeltron detectors. (Effectively just one
poor of an MCP). - MCPs provided angular resolution and a much
wider field of view for the first time. - The first MCP analyser was flown on the AMPTE
mission in 1984. - Multilayer ceramic substrate anodes with wedge
and strip pattern laser cut maximised angular
resolution.
3Principle
- Angular acceptance
- Typically 3o
Top Hat
e-
Outer Deflection Plate
Inner Deflection Plate
Field Defining Grid
MCP (amplifies charge)
Anode
4Principle
- Analyser focuses electrons
- MCP detector
5Cut Away CAD Model of CASSINI/CAPS Analyser
CAP/AMP BOARD
S/C INTERFACE
MCP ASSY.
GRID
OUTER HEMISPHERE (DEFLECTION PLATE)
LIGHT BAFFLES
HV. ELECTRONICS
TOP HAT
INNER HEMISPHERE (DEFLECTION PLATE)
DAUGHTER BOARDS
ENTRY APERTURE
MOTHER BOARD
ANODE
INSULATOR
6The Two Main Design Drivers
- Mass, one of the main considerations in deciding
suitable design and manufacturing concepts - -Sheet metal parts are the lightest but less
accurate and more difficult to produce with good
repeatability. - -Turned/milled parts more accurate but higher
mass. - -Electro Discharge Machining (EDM) enables
lighter machined parts with better accuracy. - Accuracy, high accuracy requirements demand
stiffer parts and dictate production techniques.
(Always a compromise with mass).
7GIOTTO
The First integral analyser, electronics and
mounting package
Spun hemispheres and light sheet structure
Complete GIOTTO instrument
8Accuracy (Tolerance)
- Cluster required 0.030mm tolerance on the 3.0mm
analyser gap, (1/4 of a human hair) with absolute
max. tolerance of 0.3mm - This tolerance was governed by 9 individual
tolerances on 5 different parts. - Two of these parts are Ceramic and required CTE
clearances. - All parts required assembly clearances.
- The best tolerance likely to be achieved was
assessed by calculating the root of the sum of
the squared individual tolerances and gave /-
0.790mm - However as most of the tolerances related to
turned parts inherent concentricity was in our
favour. - Final instrument performance suggested that we
were within the 1 to 10 tolerance requested.
9Engineering Models, CASSINI, PEPI, CLUSTER
CLUSTER
CASSINI
PEPI
10Design Drivers Continued
- Volume/FOV.
- Spacecraft accommodation and mounting options.
- Radiation screening.
- Should be incorporated into the design, ie
integral, not added as an after thought. - Brittle materials
- Hard to guarantee survival
- Usually have significantly different CTEs
- MCP clamping a particular worry
- High voltages
- Breakdown gaps must be maintained
- Connections and screening difficult
11Multi Layer Ceramic Anodes
EARLY CLUSTER
CLUSTER Wedge Strip Pattern (laser cut)
12TIMAS-Detector assembly for Toroidal Analyser
75mm outer radius Micro Channel Plates
13Design Drivers Continued
- Vibration
- First Eigen frequency should be gt100Hz
- Usually design for 100g dynamic load
- All fixings must be locked. (difficult for small
screws) - Thermal
- Must ensure adequate CTE allowance
- Must consider instrument thermal control.
(Usually involves careful choice of finishes and
thermal blanket provision to maintain acceptable
electronics temperatures. - Contamination
- Electronics
- Normally required to be in close proximity to
analyser and generally housed in integral
structure
14Electronics and Supporting Structure
Components for CLUSTER DPU
CLUSTER analyser assemblies
15Electronics and Supporting Structure
Analyser head body used to stiffen mounting
flanges (Dual purpose gives high structural mass
efficiency)
16CASSINI Electronics Main Structure
A compact electronics package with good
interchangeability for most PCBs
Checking flexible circuit card for fit
Final installation package
17Blacking considerations
- Ebanol-C surface conversion for light rejection.
- The process involves immersing the part to be
blacked in a succession of hot and cold chemical
baths. - Problems in sealing non blacked surfaces on
delicate parts. - Parts can only be reclaimed once if process
fails. - Blacking jigs have limited life due to chemical
erosion. - Difficult to handle and transport blacked parts.
- Difficult assembly, (if blacked surface is
touched finish is damaged).
18Blacking jigs, before and after blacking
Parts for PEPI lab analyser
19Future Developments
- The trend is to work towards smaller, lower mass
instruments, but this accentuates the problems
already facing us as - - Accuracy requirements become more acute. (SWRI)
have produced a smaller instrument but at the
cost of a larger percentage inaccuracy. - Operating voltages stay the same, so prevention
of breakdown is more difficult. - Fixings, lack of volume to accommodate them.
- PEPI instrument is the first with modular mcp
assembly achieved by supporting inner hemisphere
on spokes. Unfortunately the volume of the mcp
assembly forces instrument size back to CLUSTER
volume.
20Sub assemblies for PEPI lab analyser
21Principle
- Angular acceptance
- Typically 3o
- Require 30o
0 V
e-
HV
22Specifying Instrument requirements
- Think carefully about prime concerns/aims. Eg
mass, accuracy, volume etc. as these will affect
science capability. - Try to give realistic minimum requirements.
- Minimise restrictions.
- Remember that the final design will be a
compromise between all requirements.
23Thank you for your time and attention