Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 4 of 4
Technical Paper

Heat Exchanger Fouling Detection in Aircraft Environmental Control Systems

2012-10-22
2012-01-2107
The operating environment of aircraft causes accumulation and build-up of contamination on both the narrowest passages of the ECS (Environmental Control System) i.e: the heat exchangers. Accumulated contamination may lead to reduction of performance over time, and in some case to failures causing AOG (Aircraft on Ground), customer dissatisfaction and elevated repair costs. Airframers/airlines eschew fixed maintenance cleaning intervals because of the high cost of removing and cleaning these devices preferring instead to rely on on-condition maintenance. In addition, on-wing cleaning is t impractical because of installation constrains. Hence, it is desirable to have a contamination monitoring that could alert the maintenance crew in advance to prepare and minimize disruption when contamination levels exceed acceptable thresholds. Two methods are proposed to achieve this task, The effectiveness of these methods are demonstrated using analytical and computational tools.
Technical Paper

Design and Development of a Hydrophilic-Coated Evaporator System for Heat Rejection in Space

2001-07-09
2001-01-2153
An evaporative heat exchanger system, suitable for rejecting heat in a space environment, has been developed. The system is designed to use water as the evaporant, although other fluids are possible. The major components of the system include an evaporative heat exchanger, water spray nozzles, a back-pressure regulator, a pressurized water supply tank, and appropriate controls. The heat exchanger is a high-performance aircraft-type plate-fin design, with a proprietary hydrophilic coating applied to the evaporant-side flow passages. The hydrophilic coating promotes good contact between the evaporating water and the hot heat transfer surfaces.
Technical Paper

Advanced Heat Exchanger Technology for Aerospace Applications

2008-11-11
2008-01-2903
Thermal management requirements for aerospace applications continue to grow while weight and volume allotments remain constant or shrink. Compact, high performance and lightweight heat transfer equipment is needed to meet these high heat flux removal requirements. Several innovative heat transfer enhancement techniques are being considered for development of thermal management components that will meet these challenging demands. Honeywell, under an AFRL funded program, is developing two new heat exchanger technologies; microchannel and advanced heat transfer surfaces to improve thermal management systems for a fuel-to-air heat exchanger. Heat transfer systems in military aircraft are increasingly using fuel as a heat sink. Heat transport loops containing several fuel-to-liquid heat exchangers are used to cool electronics, engine oil, hydraulic oil, and elements of the thermal management system.
Technical Paper

A Three-Layer Model for Ice Crystal Icing in Aircraft Engines

2023-06-15
2023-01-1481
This paper presents the current state of a three-layer surface icing model for ice crystal icing risk assessment in aircraft engines, being developed jointly by Ansys and Honeywell to account for possible heat transfer from inside an engine into the flow path where ice accretion occurs. The bottom layer of the proposed model represents a thin metal sheet as a substrate surface to conductively transfer heat from an engine-internal reservoir to the ice layer. The middle layer is accretion ice with a porous structure able to hold a certain amount of liquid water. A shallow water film layer on the top receives impinged ice crystals. A mass and energy balance calculation for the film determines ice accretion rate. Water wicking and recovery is introduced to transfer liquid water between film layer and porous ice accretion layer.
X