artis said:
I suppose this ion thrust has, well very little thrust so it can only lift very light objects. It would probably take an extremely large electrode area to lift something as heavy as a passenger jet weighing about 200 tons ?
I think it's somewhat a moot point, as these devices run around 40,000
EXPOSED volts, and probably shouldn't be taken outside.
It would be an interesting math problem though. From my calculations, based on an MIT experimental device's best performance, a 200 ton helicopter would only require 16 megawatts to fly. (Which is equivalent to about 22,000 hp)
(I switched your "jet" to "helicopter", as I couldn't imagine football fields of flimsy foil flying around at high speeds)
Since semiconductors are small and lightweight these days maybe such a ion drive could replace costly satellites and I guess satellites cannot be recovered but these could?
As referenced earlier in post #6, "ionocraft", (aka "
electrohydrodynamic") type drives
don't work in a vacuum. (from the wiki reference)
Reading the info given here it seems that the PD across the electrodes is made such that the air between them is near the point of forming an arc but not close but just enough to ionize the molecules?
Since the air is ionized but there is no arc how much current is transferred between the electrodes I simply wonder how efficient is such a propulsion system?
Not much current flows. The units I've looked at run in the single milliamp range.
As to their efficiency. I'm hesitant to state my findings, as I find it hard to believe.
Meh. What the hell: They use less power than helicopters, to hover.
W/kg what
304 Mi-26 helicopter [
ref]: all helicopters: powerplant rating/max takeoff weight
311 CH-47 "Chinook" helicopter [
ref]
264 Bell 212 helicopter [
ref]
213 Bell 206 helicopter [
ref]
306 AA108 personal drone [
ref]: 2.6 Wh battery/(weight * 6 minute flight time)
143 Masuyama 2012 masters project
ionocraft [
ref]; "68.43 mN/W"
89 Masuyama & Barrett 2013
ionocraft [
ref]; "100 N/kW"
1000 wiki's ionocraft claim [
ref]; "1 gram per watt"
12500 RimstarOrg 2012 ionocraft [
ref]: 25,000 volts * 1 ma / 2 grams
--------------------------
Ah! I just discovered that the "Barrett" in my
89 W/kg reference is the same person as in your original video! What a small world.