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Technical Paper

Highway Exhaust Emissions of a Natural Gas-Diesel Dual-Fuel Heavy-Duty Truck

2024-04-09
2024-01-2120
Diesel-fueled heavy-duty vehicles (HDVs) can be retrofitted with conversion kits to operate as dual-fuel vehicles in which partial diesel usage is offset by a gaseous fuel such as compressed natural gas (CNG). The main purpose of installing such a conversion kit is to reduce the operating cost of HDVs. Additionally, replacing diesel partially with a low-carbon fuel such as CNG can potentially lead to lower carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in the tail-pipe. The main issue of CNG-diesel dual-fuel vehicles is the methane (CH4, the primary component of CNG) slip. CH4 is difficult to oxidize in the exhaust after-treatment (EAT) system and its slip may offset the advantage of lower CO2 emissions of natural gas combustion as CH4 is a strong greenhouse gas (GHG). The objective of this study is to compare the emissions of an HDV with a CNG conversion kit operating in diesel and dual-fuel mode during highway operation.
Technical Paper

Experimental and Numerical Ice Accretion Shapes on a Pitot Probe Model

2023-06-15
2023-01-1370
This paper presents experimental ice accretion measurements alongside numerical simulations, using the National Research Council Canada’s morphogenetic approach, on a pitot probe geometry at varying icing conditions. In previous publications, the morphogenetic approach for the numerical simulation of ice accretion has shown promise for pitot probe applications, potentially reducing the number of wind tunnel entries, and therefore cost, of the development cycle. An experimental campaign has been completed, providing ice shapes on a representative pitot probe model. Comparison of the experimental and numerical ice shapes indicate that the morphogenetic model is able to generate the complex ice shapes seen experimentally for real-world icing conditions on a fully 3D geometry, closely matching both ice features and total ice thicknesses.
Technical Paper

NRC’s ICE-MACR 2018-2023: What Has Been Learned So Far

2023-06-15
2023-01-1377
The Ice Crystal Environment Modular Axial Compressor Rig (ICE-MACR) was developed by the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) with support from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in response to the need to understand ice crystal icing of aircraft engines at high altitudes. Icing wind tunnel tests on static hardware lack some of the real physics of turbofan compressor such as centrifuging and fracturing of particles, and melting of particles due to compression heating, heat transfer through a casing wall, as well as annular geometry effects. Since the commissioning of ICE-MACR in 2019 new insights have been gained on the physics behind ice crystal icing of turbofan engines. Additionally, the results of various test campaigns have been used to validate engine ice accretion numerical codes. This paper summarizes the key insights into ICI of turbofans gained from the ICE-MACR to date.
Technical Paper

Ice Crystal Environment - Modular Axial Compressor Rig: Comparisons of Ice Accretion for 1 and 2 Stages of Compression

2023-06-15
2023-01-1397
In 2021 the Federal Aviation Administration in collaboration with the National Research Council of Canada performed research on altitude ice crystal icing of aircraft engines using the modular compressor rig, ICE-MACR, in an altitude wind tunnel. The aim of the research campaign was to address research needs related to ice crystal icing of aircraft engines outlined in FAA publication Engine Ice Crystal Icing Technology Plan with Research Needs. This paper reports the findings on ice accretion from a configuration of ICE-MACR with two compression stages. Inherent in two-stage operation is not just additional fracturing and heating by the second stage but also higher axial velocity and potentially greater centrifuging of particles. These factors influence the accretion behavior in the test article compared to single stage accretion.
Technical Paper

Development of a Test Rig for the Assessment of Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS) in Icing

2023-06-15
2023-01-1416
As the everyday use of flying small to medium size Remotely Piloted Aircraft System (RPAS) continues to evolve, so does the need to fly them in icing environments. To investigate an RPAS’ ability to fly in these conditions, an outdoor test rig has been developed at the National Research Council Canada (NRC) in which a range of RPAS have been tested in icing environments. This rig has an available test area of 3.05 m × 3.05 m, and is 5.1 m high. An array of spray nozzles installed at the top of the test rig provides a cloud that, when operated at sub-zero temperatures, enables simulation of in-flight icing conditions. The spray cloud is calibrated to provide water concentration and drop size distributions consistent with Appendix C, freezing drizzle and freezing rain conditions.
Technical Paper

Aluminum Sample Characterization on the NRC AIWT Ice Adhesion Spin Rig

2023-06-15
2023-01-1417
This paper presents the adhesion strength of ice on sanded and machine-finished aluminum test coupons as measured using the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) Altitude Icing Wind Tunnel (AIWT) spin rig. This rig is used to evaluate commercial and internally-developed coatings for low-adhesion properties, and the performance of ice on aluminum is required as a baseline to compare the coatings against. The tests are performed over a range of aerodynamic and icing cloud conditions, including variations in static air temperature and exposure time (and therefore accumulated ice mass). The data analysis includes an evaluation of the uncertainty in the results based on the measured ice mass repeatability and the measured shear stress repeatability.
Technical Paper

Airborne Platform for Ice-Accretion and Coatings Tests with Ultrasonic Readings (PICTUR)

2023-06-15
2023-01-1431
Hazardous atmospheric icing conditions occur at sub-zero temperatures when droplets come into contact with aircraft and freeze, degrading aircraft performance and handling, introducing bias into some of the vital measurements needed for aircraft operation (e.g., air speed). Nonetheless, government regulations allow certified aircraft to fly in limited icing environments. The capability of aircraft sensors to identify all hazardous icing environments is limited. To address the current challenges in aircraft icing detection and protection, we present herein a platform designed for in-flight testing of ice protection solutions and icing detection technologies. The recently developed Platform for Ice-accretion and Coatings Tests with Ultrasonic Readings (PICTUR) was evaluated using CFD simulations and installed on the National Research Council Canada (NRC) Convair-580 aircraft that has flown in icing conditions over North East USA, during February 2022.
Technical Paper

Development of a New Ice Crystal Icing Shear Adhesion Rotary Test Rig and Method

2023-06-15
2023-01-1426
This paper discusses the development and implementation of a new ice crystal icing (ICI) ice adhesion test system and technique. It is based on the state of the art rotary shear adhesion test rig developed at the NRC altitude icing wind tunnel (AIWT) used for supercooled liquid water (SLW) ice accretion adhesion testing. This rig was modified to use strain gauged arms for shed force measurements and implemented into the NRC ICI cascade rig at its research altitude test facility (RATFac). This permitted the exposure to a wide range of ICI conditions both in supercooled and wetbulb below freezing ICI conditions. The result is a standalone system that can be run remotely thus improving the testing efficiency by avoiding the need for accretion calibration points previously required to correlate accreted mass to icing exposure time.
Technical Paper

Development of an Altitude Evaporation Model for Icing Tunnel Control

2023-06-15
2023-01-1425
In 2017 the National Research Council of Canada developed an evaporation model for controlling engine icing tunnels in real time. The model included simplifications to allow it to update the control system once per second, including the assumption of sea level pressure in some calculations. Recently the engine icing system was required in an altitude facility requiring operation down to static temperatures of -40°C, and up to an altitude of 9.1 km (30 kft) or 30 kPa. To accommodate the larger temperature and pressure range the model was modified by removing the assumption of sea level operation and expanding the temperature range. In addition, due to the higher concentration of water vapor that can be held by the atmosphere at lower pressures, the significance of the effect of humidity on the air properties and the effect on the model was investigated.
Technical Paper

Comparability of Hot-Wire Estimates of Liquid Water Content in SLD Conditions

2023-06-15
2023-01-1423
Future compliance to FAA 14 CFR Part 25 and EASA CS-25 Appendix O conditions has required icing wind tunnels to expand their cloud simulation envelope, and demonstrate accurate calibration of liquid water content and droplet particle size distributions under these conditions. This has led to a renewed community interest in the accuracy of these calibrations, and the potential inter-facility bias due to the choice of instrumentation and processing methods. This article provides a comparison of the response of various hot-wire liquid water content instruments under Appendix C and supercooled large droplet conditions, after an independent similar analysis at other wind tunnel facilities. The instruments are being used, or are under consideration for use, by facilities collaborating in the ICE GENESIS program.
Technical Paper

Development of an Icing Test Facility for Rotors and Propellers of Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS)

2023-06-15
2023-01-1420
The development and calibration of a new facility to test medium size rotors for Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS) under in-flight icing conditions is described. This facility has made use of a 3 m x 6 m cold room available at the NRC which includes a spray system to provide the icing cloud as well as a dedicated rotor stand assembly that incorporates a load cell and dynamometer. Calibration data of the spray drop sizes and liquid water content are provided and compared to conditions of the natural environment as detailed in icing regulations for transport category airplanes, i.e., CFR 14 Part 25 Appendix C and O. Data to examine the sensitivity of rotor performance, under a constant liquid water content to various droplet sizes are provided for a medium sized rotor. Tests have also been performed that examine the ability of the rotor to maintain predefined thrust, torque and power performance throughout an icing encounter of fixed duration.
Technical Paper

Low-Adhesion Surface Evaluation on an Airfoil in the NRC AIWT

2023-06-15
2023-01-1447
The performance of low-adhesion surfaces in a realistic, in-flight icing environment with supercooled liquid droplets is evaluated using a NACA 0018 airfoil in the National Research Council of Canada Altitude Icing Wind Tunnel. This project was completed in collaboration with McGill University, the University of Toronto and the NRC Aerospace Manufacturing Technologies Centre in March 2022. Each collaborator used significantly different methods to produce low-adhesion surface treatments. The goal of the research program was to demonstrate if the low-adhesion surfaces reduced the energy required to de-ice or anti-ice an airfoil in an in-flight icing environment. Each collaborator had been developing their own low-adhesion surfaces, using bench tests in cold rooms and a spin rig in the wind tunnel to evaluate their performance. The most promising surface treatments were selected for testing on the airfoil.
Technical Paper

Design, Characterization and Initial Testing of a Vertical Stabilizer Common Research Model for Aircraft Ground Icing Testing

2023-06-15
2023-01-1439
Under contract to Transport Canada (TC) and with joint funding support from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), a vertical stabilizer common research model (VS-CRM) has been designed and built by the National Research Council of Canada (NRC). This model is a realistic, scaled representation of modern vertical stabilizer designs without being specific to a particular aircraft. The model was installed and tested in the NRC 3 m × 6 m Icing Wind Tunnel in late 2021/early 2022. Testing was led by APS Aviation Inc., with support from NRC and NASA, in order to observe the anti-icing fluids flow-off behavior with and without freezing or frozen precipitation during simulated take-off velocity profiles. The model dry-air aerodynamic properties were characterized using flow visualization tufts and boundary layer rakes. Using this data, a target baseline configuration was selected with a yaw angle equal to 0° and rudder deflection angle equal to -10°.
Technical Paper

Liquid Water Content Instrumentation Study at the NRC AIWT

2023-06-15
2023-01-1424
The National Research Council Altitude Icing Wind Tunnel liquid water content calibrations have historically relied on a 2.4 mm diameter rotating cylinder for drop sizes up to 50 μm and a 6.2 mm diameter rotating cylinder for drop sizes from 50 μm to 200 μm. This study compares the facility calibration, derived from rotating cylinder measurements, to water content measurements from the Science Engineering Associates Multi-Element Probe and the National Research Council Compact Iso-Kinetic Probe over a range of airspeeds and drop sizes. The data show where the rotating cylinder measurements may start to underestimate the liquid water content (LWC), possibly due to splashing at higher airspeeds and drop sizes. The data also show that the LWC read by the Multi-Element Probe is higher than that provided by the rotating cylinders, and the Compact Iso-Kinetic Probe (CIKP) reads higher than both other methods.
Technical Paper

Comparison of Freeze-Out versus Grind-Out Ice Crystals for Generating Ice Accretion Using the ICE-MACR

2023-06-15
2023-01-1418
Since the introduction of ice crystal icing certification requirements [1], icing facilities have played an important role in demonstrating compliance of aircraft air data probes, engine probes, and increasingly, of turbine engines. Most sea level engine icing facilities use the freezing-out of a water spray to simulate ice crystal icing conditions encountered at altitude by an aircraft in flight. However, there are notable differences in the ice particles created by freeze-out versus those observed at altitude [2, 3, 4]. Freeze-out crystals are generally spherical as compared to altitude crystals which have variable crystalline shapes. Additionally, freeze-out particles may not completely freeze in their centres, creating a combination of super-cooled liquid and ice impacting engine hardware. An alternative method for generating ice crystals in a test facility is the grinding of ice blocks or cubes to create irregular shaped crystals.
Technical Paper

An Autonomous Steering Control Scheme for Articulated Heavy Vehicles Using - Model Predictive Control Technique

2023-04-11
2023-01-0658
This article presents an autonomous steering control scheme for articulated heavy vehicles (AHVs). Despite economic and environmental benefits in freight transportation, lateral stability is always a concern for AHVs in high-speed highway operations due to their multi-unit vehicle structures, and high centers of gravity (CGs). In addition, North American harsh winter weather makes the lateral stability even more challenging. AHVs often experience amplified lateral motions of trailing vehicle units in high-speed evasive maneuvers. AHVs represent a 7.5 times higher risk than passenger cars in highway operation. Human driver errors cause about 94% of traffic collisions. However, little attention has been paid to autonomous steering control of AHVs.
Journal Article

The Influence of Traffic Wakes on the Aerodynamic Performance of Heavy Duty Vehicles

2023-04-11
2023-01-0919
Road vehicles have been shown to experience measurable changes in aerodynamic performance when travelling in everyday safe-distance driving conditions, with a major contributor being the lower effective wind speed associated with the wakes from forward vehicles. Using a novel traffic-wake-generator system, a comprehensive test program was undertaken to examine the influence of traffic wakes on the aerodynamic performance of heavy-duty vehicles (HDVs). The experiments were conducted in a large wind tunnel with four primary variants of a high-fidelity 30%-scale tractor-trailer model. Three high-roof-tractor models (conventional North-American sleeper-cab and day-cab, and a zero-emissions-cab style) paired with a standard dry-van trailer were tested, along with a low-roof day-cab tractor paired with a flat-bed trailer.
Technical Paper

Impact of Precipitation Drag on a Road Vehicle

2023-04-11
2023-01-0792
Road vehicles in the real world experience aerodynamic conditions that might be unappreciated and omitted in wind-tunnel experiments or in numerical simulations. Precipitation can potentially have an impact on the aerodynamics of road vehicles. An experimental study was devised to measure, in a wind tunnel, the impact of rain on the aerodynamic forces of the DrivAer research model. In this study, a rain system was commissioned to simulate natural rain in a wind-tunnel environment for full-scale rain rates between about 8 and 250 mm/hr. A 30%-scale DrivAer model was tested with and without precipitation for two primary configurations: the notch-back and estate-back variants. In addition, mirror-removal and covered-wheel-well configurations were investigated. The results demonstrate a distinct relationship between increasing rain intensities and increased drag of the model, providing evidence that road vehicles experience higher drag when travelling in precipitation conditions.
Journal Article

Aerodynamic Drag of Road Vehicles in Close Lateral Proximity

2023-04-11
2023-01-0952
Aerodynamic interaction between vehicles on a roadway can modify the fuel use and greenhouse gas emissions of the vehicle relative to their performance under isolated, uniform-wind conditions. A comprehensive wind-tunnel study was undertaken to examine changes to the aerodynamic drag experienced by vehicles in close proximity, in adjacent lanes. Wind-load measurements were conducted for two general configurations: 15%-scale testing with light-duty-vehicle (LDV) models, and 6.7%-scale testing with a heavy-duty vehicle (HDV) model. For the LDV study, a DrivAer model was tested with a proximate AeroSUV model or an Ahmed model at lateral distances representing 75%, 100%, and 125% of a typical highway lane spacing, and for longitudinal distances up to 2 vehicle lengths forward and back. Commensurate measurements were conducted for the AeroSUV model with the proximate DrivAer or Ahmed model.
Journal Article

Simulating Traffic-wake Effects in a Wind Tunnel

2023-04-11
2023-01-0950
Road-vehicle platooning is known to reduced aerodynamic drag. Recent aerodynamic-platooning investigations have suggested that follower-vehicle drag-reduction benefits persist to large, safe inter-vehicle driving distances experienced in everyday traffic. To investigate these traffic-wake effects, a wind-tunnel wake-generator system was designed and used for aerodynamic-performance testing with light-duty-vehicle (LDV) and heavy-duty-vehicle (HDV) models. This paper summarizes the development of this Road Traffic and Turbulence System (RT2S), including the identification of typical traffic-spacing conditions, and documents initial results from its use with road-vehicle models. Analysis of highway-traffic-volume data revealed that, in an uncongested urban-highway environment, the most-likely condition is a speed of 105 km/h with an inter-vehicle spacing of about 50 m.
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