Refine Your Search

Topic

Author

Affiliation

Search Results

Journal Article

Aspects of NVH Integration in Hybrid Vehicles

2009-05-19
2009-01-2085
NVH refinement is an important aspect of the powertrain development and vehicle integration process. The depletion of fossil-based fuels and increase in price of gasoline have prompted most vehicle manufacturers to embrace propulsion technologies with varying degrees and types of hybridization. Many different hybrid vehicle systems are either on the market, or under development, even up to all-electric vehicles. Each hybrid vehicle configuration brings unique NVH challenges that result from a variety of sources. This paper begins with an introductory discussion of hybrid propulsion technologies and associated unique vehicle NVH challenges inherent in the operation of such hybrid vehicles. Following this, the paper outlines a two-dimensional landscape of typical customer vehicle maneuvers mapped against hybrid electric vehicle (HEV) operational modes.
Journal Article

The Application of the Vincent Circle to Vibro-Acoustic and Duct Acoustic Problems

2009-05-19
2009-01-2215
Over 30 years ago, A. H. Vincent of Westland Helicopters demonstrated that if a structure is excited harmonically, the response at another position (at a fixed frequency) will trace a circle in the complex plane as a result of a dynamic stiffness modification between two points. As either the real or imaginary part of an introduced dynamic stiffness is varied from minus infinity to plus infinity, the structural or acoustic response on any position will map a circle in the complex plane. This paper reviews the basis for this little known principle for vibro-acoustics problems and illustrates the viability for a cantilevered plate example. The applicability of the method is then considered for strictly acoustic systems like intake and exhaust systems. Specifically, it is shown that the response traces a circle in the complex plane if either the real or imaginary parts of the source or termination impedance are varied from minus to plus infinity.
Journal Article

Using Designing for Human Variability to optimize Aircraft eat Layout

2009-06-09
2009-01-2310
Integrating the seemingly divergent objectives of aircraft seat configuration is a difficult task. Aircraft manufacturers look to design seats to maximize customer satisfaction and in-flight safety, but these objectives can conflict with the profit motive of airline companies. In order to boost revenue by increasing the number of passengers per aircraft, airline companies may increase seat height and decrease seat pitch. This results in disaccommodation of a greater percentage of the passenger population and is a reason for rising customer dissatisfaction. This paper describes an effort to bridge this gap by incorporating digital human models, layout optimization, and a profit-maximizing constraint into the aircraft seat design problem. A simplified aircraft seat design experiment is conceptualized and its results are extrapolated to an airline passenger population.
Journal Article

System Dependency Analysis as a Common Cause Search Engine for Complex Aircraft Systems

2009-11-10
2009-01-3105
The system dependency analysis for complex aircraft systems is a model-based methodology and tool for analyzing availability and minimum acceptable control requirements for failures or event scenarios to support the aircraft and system safety analyses (SAE ARP4761) required to show compliance to 14CFR/CS §25.1309, §25.671 and other, related requirements. Aspects of the system such as functional interaction and dependencies to supply systems, physical items (equipment, wiring and tubing) and installation aspects are included in the analysis. This paper describes additional steps to enable the search for potential common cause failure conditions for the system of interest or airplane level systems based on the system model. Common cause analysis (CCA) procedures using the system dependency analysis rely on a systematic and checklist-based approach to determine potential common cause failure conditions.
Journal Article

System Dependency Analysis Supporting Common Cause Analyses of Complex Aircraft Systems

2009-11-10
2009-01-3107
The system dependency analysis for complex aircraft systems is a model-based methodology and tool for analyzing availability and minimum acceptable control requirements for failures or event scenarios to support the aircraft and system safety analyses (SAE ARP4761) required to show compliance to 14CFR/CS §25.1309, §25.671 and others. Aspects of the system such as functional interaction and dependencies to supply systems, physical items (equipment, wiring and tubing) and installation aspects are included in the analysis. The SAE paper “System Dependency Analysis for Complex Aircraft Systems” (2007-01-3852) describes the modeling approach and the analysis of system dependencies supporting the aircraft and system safety analyses. This paper provides examples for using the system dependency analysis to support the common cause analyses (SAE ARP4761) for complex aircraft systems.
Journal Article

DRESS: Distributed and Redundant Electro-mechanical Nose Wheel Steering System

2009-11-10
2009-01-3110
Scope of the DRESS project is to research, develop and validate a distributed and redundant electrical steering system technology for an aircraft nose landing gear. The new system aims to: • reduce system weight at aircraft level, replacing the current hydraulic actuation system with an electric one. • improve aircraft safety, achieving higher system redundancy levels compared to the current technology capabilities. This paper presents an outline of different activities occurring in the DRESS project and also shows preliminary results of the new system performance.
Journal Article

Assembly Simulation of Riveting Process

2009-11-10
2009-01-3215
The presented paper introduces the new software complex aimed at simulation of the riveting process as applied to aircraft parts. The software complex implements the novel mathematical model based on minimization of the potential energy. The paper gives the detailed description of the mathematical model and particularizes the main features of the software. The physical and numerical tests aimed at validation of the software are also described in the paper.
Journal Article

Solution for Automated Drilling and Lockbolt Installation in Carbon Fiber Structures

2009-11-10
2009-01-3214
Manual drilling and Lockbolt installation in carbon fiber structures is a labor intensive process. To reduce man hour requirements while concurrently improving throughput and process quality levels BROETJE-Automation developed a gantry positioning system with high performance multi-function end effectors for this application. This paper presents a unique solution featuring fully automated drilling and Lockbolt installation (inclusive of automated collar installation) for the vertical tail plane (vertical stabilizer) of large commercial aircraft. A flexible and reconfigurable assembly jig facilitates high access of the end effectors and increases the equipment efficiency. The described system fulfils the demand for affordable yet flexible precision manufacturing with the capacity to handle different aircraft model panels within the work envelope.
Journal Article

Recent Advances Towards an Integrated and Optimized Design of High Lift Actuation Systems

2009-11-10
2009-01-3217
For actuation of high lift surfaces in modern airplanes, complex mechanical shaft transmission systems powered by central drive units are deployed. The design of mechanical actuation systems, which have a major share in the weight of secondary flight controls, is a complex and challenging engineering task. Especially for specification of essential component and system design parameters within the preliminary design phase, engineering skill and experience are of significant importance owing to many uncertainties in component data and boundary conditions. Extensive trade-offs, as well as an evaluation of the system requirements and constraints lead to an iterative and time-consuming design process. Utilizing an integrated design assistance tool, mathematical functions and constraints can be modeled on system and component level and formalized as a constraint satisfaction problem (CSP). Thus, automated consistency checking and pruning of the solution space can be achieved.
Journal Article

Flying Test Bed Performance Testing of High-Bypass-Ratio Turbofans

2009-11-10
2009-01-3133
The commercial turbofan trend of increasing bypass ratio and decreasing fan pressure ratio has seen its latest market entry in Pratt & Whitney's PurePower™ product line, which will power regional aircraft for the Bombardier and Mitsubishi corporations, starting in 2013. The high-bypass-ratio, low-fan-pressure-ratio trend, which is aimed at diminishing noise while increasing propulsive efficiency, combines with contemporary business factors including the escalating cost of testing and limited availability of simulated altitude test sites to pose formidable challenges for engine certification and performance validation. Most fundamentally, high bypass ratio and low fan pressure ratio drive increased gross-to-net thrust ratio and decreased fan temperature rise, magnifying by a factor of two or more the sensitivity of in-flight thrust and low spool efficiency to errors of measurement and assumption, i.e., physical modeling.
Journal Article

Applying Poincaré Plots for Evaluating the Health State of Aircraft Generators

2009-11-10
2009-01-3161
This paper explores the use of Poincaré plots to study signal variability of Navy P-3 aircraft generators. The method, which was inspired from nonlinear dynamics for analyzing interval sequences, is a technique used to plot each interval against the subsequent interval of the signal from different points of view. The geometry of the plots reveals salient features among new, low-usage, and high-usage generators. In addition to its simple visual interpretation, quantitative descriptors were explored to assess the degree of degradation of the overall system health state. The results suggest that accurate health state predictions can be achieved if baseline data can be collected.
Journal Article

Advanced Electrical Signature Analysis of Aircraft Electrical Generators

2009-11-10
2009-01-3162
The electrical and mechanical failures (such as bearing and winding failures) combine to cause premature failures of the generators, which become a flight safety issue forcing the crew to land as soon as practical. Currently, diagnostic / prognostic technologies are not implemented for aircraft generators where repairs are time consuming and its costs are high. This paper presents the development of feature extraction and diagnostic algorithms to ultimately 1) differentiate between these failure modes and normal aircraft operational modes; and 2) determine the degree of damage of a generator. Electrical signature analysis based features were developed to distinguish between healthy and degraded generators while taking into account their operating conditions. The diagnostic algorithms were developed to have a high fault / high-hour detection rate along with a low false alarm rate.
Journal Article

Managing Aircraft Simulation Requirements with Content-Based Image Retrieval

2009-11-10
2009-01-3149
Requirements analysis for aircraft simulators is often driven by photographs and videos of the actual aircraft. An engineer may gather and organize hundreds or even thousands of source photos of various instruments and devices unique to the aircraft. Managing all of this source information and referencing it to generate software requirements can be challenging and time-consuming. This paper explores Content Based Image Retrieval (CBIR) techniques to automatically process and search those images to generate basic requirements and to facilitate reuse. An unsupervised clustering algorithm groups source images based on minimal user input. Images processed in this way can also be queried by image similarity, thereby allowing project managers to find common source material among projects. The effectiveness of these techniques is demonstrated on an example cockpit.
Journal Article

Improving Cabin Thermal Comfort by Controlling Equivalent Temperature

2009-11-10
2009-01-3265
An aircraft environmental control system (ECS) is commonly designed for a cabin that has been divided into several thermal control zones; each zone has an air flow network that pulls cabin air over an isolated thermocouple. This single point measurement is used by the ECS to control the air temperature and hence the thermal environment for each zone. The thermal environment of a confined space subjected to asymmetric thermal loads can be more fully characterized, and subsequently better controlled, by determining its “equivalent temperature.” This paper describes methodology for measuring and controlling cabin equivalent temperature. The merits of controlling a cabin thermal zone based on its equivalent temperature are demonstrated by comparing thermal comfort, as predicted by a “virtual thermal manikin,” for both air-temperature and equivalent-temperature control strategies.
Journal Article

Modeling of Fastener Kitting Logistics for Boeing Wide Body Airplanes

2009-11-10
2009-01-3252
At Boeing’s commercial aircraft production in Everett Washington, the organization that supplies parts to the factory floor (known internally as Company 625) is revising their methods. A new process will deliver parts in kits that correspond to the installation plans used by the mechanics. Several alternative methods are under review. The authors used simulation methods to evaluate and compare these alternatives. This study focuses on the category of parts known as standard fasteners (‘standards’). Through direct observation, interviews with experts, as well as time and motion study, the process flow of the kitting operation was mapped A simulation model was created using the simulation software ARENA to examine two scenarios: the current kitting operation in the factory cribs and the proposed centralization of kitting operation in the Company 625.
Journal Article

Experimental Techniques of Measuring Vibratory Force for Aircraft Wings

2009-11-10
2009-01-3283
The authors measured the vibratory forces acting on an airfoil model by performing a ground vibration test (GVT). The airfoil model was manufactured using rapid prototyping. In the experiments, the airfoil model's structural response was also recorded and described. This paper detailedly introduces the entire experiment process and the obtained experimental data agreed well to the actual values.
Journal Article

Integration of Thermal Control Electronics and Monitoring Functions in a Multifunctional Structure

2009-07-12
2009-01-2588
In several industrial fields, the integration of functions is a key technology to enhance the efficiency of components in terms of performance to mass/volume/cost ratio. Concerning the space industry, in the last few years the trend in spacecraft design has been towards smaller, light-weight and higher performance satellites with sophisticated payloads and instrumentation. Increasing power density figures are the common feature of such systems, constituting a challenging task for the Thermal Control System. The traditional mechanical and thermal design concepts are evidencing their limits with reference to such an emerging scenario.
Journal Article

Model Based Diagnostics of an Aircraft Generator Using AAKR and SPRT

2010-11-02
2010-01-1761
Electrical power generation is an important component in the Electrical Power System of an Aircraft (EPS). In this paper we present a model based diagnostic framework for early generator degradation detection and tracking within an Aircraft Generator. The nominal health state is modeled empirically using an Auto-associative Kernel Regression (AAKR) technique using signals extracted from a healthy generator. Later the health state is estimated by comparing sensor observations with the model predictions. Finally, a Sequential Probability Ratio Test (SPRT) is used to detect and track degradation. This model based framework showed excellent degradation tracking performance when it was tested on a unit that was run to failure.
Journal Article

A Framework for Developing an EPS Health Management System

2010-11-02
2010-01-1725
This paper describes a framework for developing an Integrated Electrical Power System (EPS) Health Management System. The framework is based on the perspective that health management, unlike other capabilities, is not a self-contained, stand-alone system, but is rather an integral part of every aircraft subsystem, system, and the entire platform. Ultimately, the objective is to improve the entire maintenance, logistics and fleet operations support processes. This perspective requires a new mindset when applying systems engineering design principles. The paper provides an overview description of the framework, the potential benefits of the approach and some critical design and implementation issues based on current development efforts.
X