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Technical Paper

CFD Numerical Simulation Aero-engine Air-Oil Separator

2022-03-08
2022-01-0027
Engine oil systems drive and de-aerate air-oil solutions in a two-phase flow to provide an appropriate amount of oil lubrication and cooling. especially in aero-engine and starter-generator component and system. The oil lubrication systems combine three important functions of the Main Oil Pump (MOP) for lubrication and scavenging: the de-aeration and de-oiling of the air-oil mixture generated in the bearing and gearbox sumps and pumping the oil towards the tank. These are critical functions for the aero-engine and starter-generator. An aero-engine lubrication system along with an integrated pump and separation of gas-liquid mixture has been developed and characterized experimentally to increase Collins Aerospace Engine and Control Systems research and development productivity. This system has also improved engine and starter-generator reliability and system performance.
Technical Paper

Operating the Navigation Database Server from Ground Station

2022-05-26
2022-26-0028
The main aim of operating the navigation database server from ground station (Web/cloud) is to operate a single navigation database server across all aircrafts and navigation database updates can be performed at one place. which will be effective and quick, thus no need to update the navigation database in each flight for every 28 days. UAM refers to a safe and efficient air transportation system that uses transformative new airborne technology, manned and unmanned, to move people and goods in a metropolitan area, operating the navigation data base server from ground station might be the first step towards including the FMS system in urban air mobility (UAM). the proposed system can run as standalone application and provides serveries to all aircrafts from single resource; thus, the system will provide services with low cost.
Technical Paper

Characterization of Clearances and its Optimization for Vibration Control of Hydraulic Actuators

2022-05-26
2022-26-0002
A typical linear hydraulic actuator would have clearances between the mating components such as Piston-Cylinder arrangement for achieving the functional requirements. It is observed from the vibration tests that the natural frequencies and the responses vary significantly with the excitation levels in these actuators. With increase in the excitation levels natural frequency of the actuators increases, and the damping ratio reduces significantly indicating a nonlinear behavior of the system. Also due to these clearances, jump phenomena and cubic stiffness nonlinearity are identified on the typical hydraulic actuators. The characterization of the clearances and its impact on the vibratory responses is discussed in this paper. Clearances at two interface locations for a typical hydraulic actuator were identified and a Design of Experiments (DOEs) was formulated with different levels of clearances.
Technical Paper

Smart Manufacturing with Augmented Reality

2022-05-26
2022-26-0026
Aircraft Manufacturing procedures are very critical which always require skillful engineers who must adhere to various process and procedure during daily work. The challenge is not only to identify right tools and manuals but also to keep track of operator usage data and behavior. With Augmented reality (AR), intelligent tools and analytics, we can provide a new lease of life to first-line assembly engineers. The objective is how AR can help us to reduce rework or scrap with the concept of Industry 4.0 [1] were integrating with cutting edge technologies like machine learning and the internet of things (IoT) to meet the fundamental requirements during manufacturing. Smart Manufacturing consists of four major components Cyber-physical systems, IoT, cloud computing and cognitive computing.
Technical Paper

Pitot Probe and Total Air Temperature (TAT) Probe Ice Crystal Icing Impact to Aircraft Operation and Methods to Improve Probe Performance

2023-06-15
2023-01-1395
Pitot probes and Total Air Temperature (TAT) probes are critical to aircraft performance. They are also susceptible to becoming overwhelmed and produce erroneous outputs when flying in icing conditions, especially in high altitude ice crystal situations. When the probes are overwhelmed with ice crystals, it can have significant impacts to aircraft operations. Through design and process iterations, Collins Aerospace (also known as Rosemount Aerospace™), has developed new Appendix D compliant pitot and TAT probes that are much more capable in high ice crystal content icing environments which greatly reduce the adverse risks to the aircraft and engine systems that depend on these probes.
Technical Paper

A Comparison of Multiphase Flow CFD Methods for Simulating Liquid Water Concentration at Air Data Probe Fuselage Stations

2023-06-15
2023-01-1390
Multiphase CFD simulations of air and water play a critical role in aircraft icing analysis. Specifically for air data sensors mounted near the front of an aircraft, simulations that predict the concentration of water surrounding an aircraft fuselage are necessary for understanding their performance in icing conditions. Those simulations can aid in sensor design and placement, and are central for defining critical conditions to test during icing qualification campaigns. There are several methods available in CFD that solve a multiphase flow field. Two of the most common methods used are Lagrangian and Eulerian. While these methods are similar, important differences can be viewed in the results, specifically in how the water shadow zones are predicted. This paper compares a Lagrangian and Eulerian CFD method for solving a multiphase flow field, and assesses their performance for use for analyzing installation locations and critical icing conditions of air data probes.
Technical Paper

Icing Simulation Framework: A Predictive Approach from Nucleation to Runback

2023-06-15
2023-01-1460
This paper provides an overview of the state-of-art multiscale “Icing Simulation Framework” capability developed at Raytheon Technologies Research Center. Specifically, the application of this framework to simulate droplet runback and runback icing will be presented. In summary, this high-fidelity framework tracks the physical mechanisms associated with droplet dynamics, ice nucleation, growth and interaction with the environment (e.g. adhesion, crystal growth, evaporation, sublimation, etc.) across all relevant scales (including nucleation at <10-7m to ~10-6m of coating/environment interaction to 10-2m of the component) which allows a rigorous investigation of how different environmental (e.g. LWC, MVD, pressure, velocity and temperature) and substrate (e.g. coating molecular and macroscopic specifications) characteristics affect the icing behavior.
Technical Paper

Minimum Operational Performance Standards for Weather Radar Ice Crystal Detection Function

2023-06-15
2023-01-1433
The RTCA SC-230 committee began working on minimum operational performance standards (MOPS) for ice crystal detection using weather radar in 2018. The resulting MOPS document will be released in 2023. This paper presents the rationale, summarizes key requirements, and discusses means of validation for an ice crystal detection function incorporated in an airborne weather radar system.
Technical Paper

Liquid Water Detection Algorithm for the Magnetostrictive Ice Detector

2023-06-15
2023-01-1430
For nearly a century, ice build-up on aircraft surfaces has presented a safety concern for the aviation industry. Pilot observations of visible moisture and temperature has been used a primary means to detect conditions conducive to ice accretion on aircraft critical surfaces. To help relieve flight crew workload and improve aircraft safety, various ice detection systems have been developed. Some ice detection systems have been successfully certified as the primary means of detecting ice, negating the need for the flight crew to actively monitor for icing conditions. To achieve certification as a Primary ice detection system requires detailed substantiation of ice detector performance over the full range of icing conditions and aircraft flight conditions. Some notable events in the aviation industry have highlighted certain areas of the icing envelope that require special attention.
Technical Paper

Optical Ice Detector: Measurement Comparison to Research Probes

2023-06-15
2023-01-1428
The Collins Aerospace Optical Ice Detector is a short-range polarimetric cloud lidar designed to detect and discriminate among all types of icing conditions with the use of a single sensor. Recent flight tests of the Optical Ice Detector (OID) aboard a fully instrumented atmospheric research aircraft have allowed comparisons of measurements made by the OID with those of standard cloud research probes. The tests included some icing conditions appropriate to the most recent updates to the icing regulations. Cloud detection, discrimination of mixed phase, and quantification of cloud liquid water content for a cloud within the realm of Appendix C were all demonstrated. The duration of the tests (eight hours total) has allowed the compilation of data from the OID and cloud probes for a more comprehensive comparison. The OID measurements and those of the research probes agree favorably given the uncertainties inherent in these instruments.
Technical Paper

Optical Ice Detector Lite: Initial Flight Test Results

2023-06-15
2023-01-1427
In response to safety regulations regarding aircraft icing, Collins Aerospace has developed and tested a new generation of optical ice detectors (OID Lite) intended to discriminate among icing conditions described by Appendix C and Appendix O of 14 CFR Part 25 and Appendix D of Part 33. The OID Lite is a flush-mounted, short-range, polarimetric optical sensor that samples the airstream up to two meters beyond the skin of the aircraft. The intensity and polarization of the backscatter light correlate with bulk properties of the cloud, such as cloud density and phase. Drizzle-sized droplets, mixed within a small droplet cloud, appear as scintillation spikes in the lidar signal when it is processed pulse-by-pulse. Scintillation in the backscatter (in combination with the outside air temperature monitored by another probe) signals the presence of supercooled large droplets (SLD) within the cloud—a capability incorporated into the OID Lite to meet the requirements of Appendix O.
Technical Paper

Numerical Investigation of Pressure Tube Anti-Icing Heat Transfer

2023-06-15
2023-01-1440
This work presents the anti-icing simulation results from a pressure sensing probe. This study used various turbulence models to understand their influence in surface temperature prediction. A fully turbulence model and a transition turbulence model are considered in this work. Both dry air and icing conditions are considered for this study. The results show that at low Angle of Attack (AOA) both turbulence model results compared well and at higher AOA the results deviated. Overall, as AOA increases, the k-ꞷ SST model predicted the surface temperature colder than the Transition SST model result.
Journal Article

Four Years of Testing to AS5562

2019-06-10
2019-01-1957
With the publication of SAE AS5562 in 2015, icing wind tunnel test facilities have upgraded their operating environments and instrumentation to meet the client demand to test to this new standard. Nearing four years of testing and development to this standard, numerous questions and challenges have arisen that industry has addressed on an individual basis but not in a common format for all. This paper addresses some of the known challenges in an effort to apply AS5562 consistently across industry and provide clarity to all users.
Technical Paper

Practical Implementation and Associated Challenges of Integrated Torque Limiter

2022-03-08
2022-01-0038
Evolving of aircraft design towards further electrification requires safe and fault-free operation of all the components. More electric aircraft are increasingly utilizing electro-mechanical actuators (EMA). EMAs are prone to jamming and subsequent failure due to large forces on the shaft. Large forces are generated due to the high reflected inertia of the electric machine rotor. To limit the force acting on the shaft, a torque limiting device is connected to the power train which can separate the rotating mass of the electric machine from the power train. In this paper, a concept of integration of torque limiter and the electric machine rotor is presented to reduce overall volume and mass. It is connected closely with the rotor, within the motor envelope. A commercially available torque limiter and an electric machine designed for actuator application are used to demonstrate the concept. While essential for safety, the torque limiter adds to the mass and size of the overall EMA.
Technical Paper

Development of a Robust Surface Ply for Pneumatic Deicers

2023-06-15
2023-01-1403
The purpose of this paper to is to review the methodology applied by Collins Aerospace to develop, test and qualify a more robust surface ply rubber compound that has demonstrable improvements in durability and performance at sub-freezing temperatures. Using in-service products as a reference, pneumatic deicers in use on regional turboprop applications were selected as a basis for operational characteristics and observed failure modes. Custom test campaigns were developed by Collins to comparatively evaluate key characteristics of the surface ply material including low temperature elasticity, erosion durability, and fluid susceptibility. Collins’ proprietary engineered rubber formulations were individually evaluated and built into fully functional test deicers for component level testing to DO-160G environmental exposure, comparative ice shed performance in Collins’ Icing Wind Tunnel and erosion in Collins’ Rain Erosion Silo.
Technical Paper

Effect of Icing Environment and Humidity on Reference Air Data Parameters in an Icing Tunnel

2019-06-10
2019-01-1929
Wind tunnel facilities typically rely upon reference instrumentation combined with isentropic flow relationships to define the fluid properties in the test section. For the particular case of icing wind tunnels, the icing environment can affect the airflow such that the definition of test section parameters via isentropic relationships is not strictly correct. These influences are of particular importance for testing air data probes because the nature of the test is to evaluate the performance of a sensor directly measuring the parameters being affected. Momentum, heat, and mass transfer from the water phase to the air phase can result in total temperature and total pressure measurements in the test section that differ from those measured at an upstream station, where reference measurements are typically taken. This effect was first observed by Luers & Fiscus [1] in the context of wind tunnel tests for heavy rain conditions.
Technical Paper

SLD and Ice Crystal Discrimination with the Optical Ice Detector

2019-06-10
2019-01-1934
In response to new safety regulations regarding aircraft icing, Collins Aerospace has developed and tested an Optical Ice Detector (OID) capable of discriminating among icing conditions appropriate to Appendix C and Appendix O of 14 CFR Part 25 and Appendix D of Part 33. The OID is a short-range, polarimetric lidar that samples the airstream up to ten meters beyond the skin of the aircraft. The intensity and extinction of the backscatter light correlate with bulk properties of the cloud, such as water content and phase. Backscatter scintillation (combined with the outside air temperature from another probe) signals the presence of supercooled large droplets (SLD) within the cloud-a capability incorporated into the OID to meet the requirements of Appendix O. Recent laboratory and flight tests of the Optical Ice Detector have confirmed the efficacy of the OID to discriminate among the various icing conditions.
Technical Paper

The Cloud Detectability Conundrum

2019-06-10
2019-01-1932
Since the beginning of aviation, aircraft designers, researchers, and pilots have monitored the skies looking for clouds to determine when and where to fly as well as when to deice aircraft surfaces. Seeing a cloud has generally consisted of looking for a white / grey puffy orb floating in the sky, indicating the presence of moisture. A simple monitoring of a temperature gauge or dew point sensor was used to help determine if precipitation was likely or accumulation of ice / snow on the airframe could occur. Various instruments have been introduced over the years to identify the presence of clouds and characterize them for the purposes of air traffic control weather awareness, icing flight test measurements, and production aircraft ice detection. These instruments have included oil slides, illuminated rods, vibrating probes, hot wires, LIDAR, RADAR, and several other measurement techniques.
Journal Article

Digital Data Standards in Aircraft Asset Lifecycle: Current Status and Future Needs

2021-03-02
2021-01-0035
The aerospace ecosystem is a complex system of systems comprising of many stakeholders in exchanging technical, design, development, certification, operational, and maintenance data across the different lifecycle stages of an aircraft from concept, engineering, manufacturing, operations, and maintenance to its disposal. Many standards have been developed to standardize and improve the effectiveness, efficiency, and security of the data transfer processes in the aerospace ecosystem. There are still challenges in data transfer due to the lack of standards in certain areas and lack of awareness and implementation of some standards. G-31 standards committee of SAE International has conducted a study on the available digital data standards in aircraft asset life cycle to understand the current and future landscapes of the needed digital data standards and identify gaps. This technical paper presents the study conducted by the G-31 technical committee.
Journal Article

Turbojet Engine Parameters Calculation Based on Fuel Flow and Exhaust Gas Temperature

2021-03-02
2021-01-0029
The aircraft jet engine is one of the most complex multivariable systems with multiple inputs and multiple outputs. To attempt to optimize control functions or to address diagnostic problems, a detailed knowledge of all jet engine design parameters and performances is required. Although jet engines have been around for almost a century, there are only a few companies in the world presently designing and manufacturing them; as such these companies possess detailed knowledge of all relevant design characteristics and performance parameters. In the event where jet engine technical details are unknown, or only a few of them are known from manufacturer’s catalogues, the challenge becomes how to calculate and extrapolate critical performance parameters based on only fuel flow, jet exhaust temperature and total thrust.
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