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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.
Technical Paper

An Algebraic-Summation-Based 3-ph Phase-Locked Loop in Aerospace Applications

2010-11-02
2010-01-1807
This work deals with modeling and analysis of a 3-phase Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) based on an algebraic-summation scheme rather than the Stationary/Floating frame transformation PLL or synchronous (Delta Q) frame transformation PLL, and operated to lock on either linear or nonlinear load current waveform, and in the presence of a loss of phase or unbalanced 3-phase load. The PLL scheme is described and performance results are presented, demonstrating its ability to estimate phase and frequency of the input signal in aerospace applications in which a Unity Vector production and a Frequency-to-Voltage conversion is performed.
Technical Paper

Control of Cabin and Cargo Heaters in Aerospace Applications

2012-10-22
2012-01-2196
The comparison between a proposed aircraft cabin and cargo heater control system and conventional control schemes is presented together with the key performance figures of the systems. An active AC/DC converter comprising a Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) is proposed to control the energy supplied by the AC Variable Frequency (VF) source to the heater loads instead of controlling the energy by means of a Pulse-Width Modulated (PWM) AC power flow. The proposed system eliminates problems associated with interharmonics generated in the AC VF PWM case - a material advantage. It draws a close to sinusoidal current from the VF source, features a near unity power factor, and operates within the VF range due to the use of PLL.
Technical Paper

Creating a System Architecture for a Vehicle Condition-Based Maintenance System

2012-10-22
2012-01-2097
An emerging emphasis for the design and development of vehicle condition-based maintenance (CBM) systems amplifies its use for conducting vehicle maintenance based on evidence of need. This paper presents a systems engineering approach to creating an integrated vehicle health management (IVHM) architecture which places emphasis on the system's ultimate use to meet the operational needs of the vehicle and fleet maintainer, to collect data, conduct analysis, and support the decision-making processes for the sustainment and operations of the vehicle and assets being monitored. The demand for a CBM system generally assumes that the asset being monitored is complex or that the operational use of the system demands complexity, timely response or that system failure has catastrophic results. Ground vehicles are such complex systems, which are the emphasis of this paper. Developing the system architecture of such complex systems demands a systematic approach.
Technical Paper

Development of a Passive Gas Trap for Internal Thermal Control System

2009-07-12
2009-01-2452
A passive gas removal device, i.e. gas trap is used in the Internal Thermal Control System (ITCS) of the International Space Station (ISS) to remove non-condensable gases to prevent the cavitation or air locking of the pump and malfunction of the pressure and flow sensors. Since the non-condensable gases are always ingested into the ITCS during the routine maintenance and/or replacement of components in the ITCS, it is necessary to have an efficient and reliable gas trap in the liquid coolant loop of the ITCS. To increase tolerance to particulate and microbial growth fouling, extend the operational life, reduce the cost and on-orbit maintenance, and decrease crew workload, an alternative gas trap composed of only one type of membrane is developed. This paper describes the efforts involved in this development, which include the design concept of the alternative gas trap, performance modeling, and the preliminary performance test of the alternative gas trap in the relevant environment.
Journal Article

Health Ready Components-Unlocking the Potential of IVHM

2016-04-05
2016-01-0075
Health Ready Components are essential to unlocking the potential of Integrated Vehicle Health Management (IVHM) as it relates to real-time diagnosis and prognosis in order to achieve lower maintenance costs, greater asset availability, reliability and safety. IVHM results in reduced maintenance costs by providing more accurate fault isolation and repair guidance. IVHM results in greater asset availability, reliability and safety by recommending preventative maintenance and by identifying anomalous behavior indicative of degraded functionality prior to detection of the fault by other detection mechanisms. The cost, complexity and effectiveness of the IVHM system design, deployment and support depend, to a great extent, on the degree to which components and subsystems provide the run-time data needed by IVHM and the design time semantic data to allow IVHM to interpret those messages.
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.
Journal Article

High Altitude Ice Crystal Detection with Aircraft X-band Weather Radar

2019-06-10
2019-01-2026
During participation on EU FP7 HAIC project, Honeywell has developed methodology to detect High Altitude Ice Crystals with the Honeywell IntuVue® RDR-4000 X-band Weather Radar. The algorithm utilizes 3D weather buffer of RDR-4000 weather radar and is based on machine learning. The modified RDR-4000 Weather Radar was successfully flight tested during 2016 HAIC Validation Campaign; the technology was granted Technology Readiness Level 6 by HAIC consortium. After the end of HAIC project, the method was also evaluated with respect to newly set preliminary industry standard performance requirements1. This paper discuses technology design rationale, high level technology architecture, technology performance, and challenges associated with performance evaluation.
Technical Paper

Lightning Requirements: Where They Come From and How to Analyze Their Impact

2012-10-22
2012-01-2149
Many avionics and aircraft equipment manufacturers use DO-160 [Ref. 1] Section 22 to test their equipment for indirect effects of lightning without understanding why they are testing to specific values. Many aircraft manufacturers struggle with determining the level of indirect lightning that will be acceptable for their vehicle and what level of requirements they need to pass down to the avionics and aircraft equipment manufacturers. Organizations like SAE and RTCA, Inc. work to collect data on lightning and spend countless hours assimilating the information and developing documents to help engineers use the information. They struggle with knowing what data is pertinent and how it will be received and used by the engineering community.
Technical Paper

Reduced Order Tracking 3-ph Phase-Locked Loops in Aerospace Applications

2012-10-22
2012-01-2195
Modeling and analysis of a reduced order tracking 3-phase Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) based on a combined control principle (error + disturbance) to improve PLL locking performance is presented in this work. The principle is in synthesizing a feedforward control that is added to a Stationary/Floating Frame Transformation PLL or Synchronous (Delta Q) Frame Transformation PLL. The feedforward comprises a frequency-to-voltage converter based on a phase/frequency estimation using an algebraic summation while implementing an inverse feedforward control principle relative to the part of the feedback loop seen after the summing junction. The reduced order tracking PLL is shown to desensitize the system relative to the conventional part PI controller tuning parameters and is operated to lock on either linear or nonlinear load current waveform and for arbitrary frequency/phase profile while maintaining stability by minimizing system dynamics.
Technical Paper

Refinements to Mechanical Health Monitoring Algorithms

2012-10-22
2012-01-2096
This paper discusses recent improvements made by Honeywell's Condition-Based Maintenance (CBM) Center of Excellence (COE) to Mechanical Health Management (MHM) algorithms. The Honeywell approach fuses Condition Indicators (CIs) from vibration monitoring and oil debris monitoring. This paper focuses on using MHM algorithms for monitoring gas turbine engines. First an overview is given that explains the general MHM approach, and then specific examples of how the algorithms are being refined are presented. One of the improvements discussed involves how to detect a fault earlier in the fault progression, while continuing to avoid false alarms. The second improvement discussed is how to make end of life thresholds more robust: rather than relying solely on the cumulative mass of oil debris, the end of life indication is supplemented with indicators that consider the rate of debris generation.
Technical Paper

Study on Main Engine Start for More Electric Architecture Aircraft

2006-11-07
2006-01-3071
This paper studies the technical characteristics of a start system for aircraft engines. By using the latest improvements in power electronics and digital controls this system eliminates the conventional Air Turbine Starter (ATS) or DC starter by driving the generator installed on the engine as a motor to achieve the start. The presented start system enables a completely new architecture in today's modern and efficient aircraft using the More Electric Architecture (MEA), since bleed air is not required to start the main engines. The MEA increases the overall efficiency of the aircraft by electrically driving the Environmental Control System (ECS) and other major systems such as anti-ice, landing gear, hydraulics etc. This start system eliminates the ATS and its equipment (bleed valve, clutch) for the larger engines or the DC Starter, while providing a start where the engine is accelerated up to 80% idle speed vs. 50-60% provided by the previous Starter.
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