Propulsion system safety analysis methodology for commercial transport aircraft

Airworthiness certification of commercial transport aircraft requires a safety analysis of the propulsion system to establish that the probability of a failure jeopardising the safety of the aeroplane is acceptably low. The needs and desired features of such a propulsion system safety analysis are d...

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Main Author: Knife, S.
Other Authors: Fielding, John
Language:en
Published: Cranfield University 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1826/4256
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spelling ndltd-CRANFIELD1-oai-dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk-1826-42562013-04-19T15:25:39ZPropulsion system safety analysis methodology for commercial transport aircraftKnife, S.Airworthiness certification of commercial transport aircraft requires a safety analysis of the propulsion system to establish that the probability of a failure jeopardising the safety of the aeroplane is acceptably low. The needs and desired features of such a propulsion system safety analysis are discussed, and current techniques and assumptions employed in such analyses are evaluated. It is concluded that current assumptions and techniques are not well suited to predicting behaviour of the propulsion system in service. The propulsion accident history of the high bypass ratio commercial transport fleet is reviewed and an alternate approach to propulsion system safety analysis is developed, based on this accident history. Features of the alternate approach include quantified prediction of propulsion related crew error, engine-level reliability growth modelling to realistically predict engine failure rates, and quantified credit for design features which mitigate the effects of propulsion system failures. The alternate approach is validated by applying it to two existing propulsion systems. It is found to produce forecasts in good agreement with service experience. Use of the alternate approach to propulsion system safety analysis during design and development will enable accurate prediction of the expected propulsion related accident rate and identification of opportunities to reduce the accident rate by incorporating mitigating features into the propulsion system/ aeroplane design.Cranfield UniversityFielding, John2010-02-19T15:23:28Z2010-02-19T15:23:28Z1997-09Thesis or dissertationDoctoralPhDhttp://hdl.handle.net/1826/4256en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Airworthiness certification of commercial transport aircraft requires a safety analysis of the propulsion system to establish that the probability of a failure jeopardising the safety of the aeroplane is acceptably low. The needs and desired features of such a propulsion system safety analysis are discussed, and current techniques and assumptions employed in such analyses are evaluated. It is concluded that current assumptions and techniques are not well suited to predicting behaviour of the propulsion system in service. The propulsion accident history of the high bypass ratio commercial transport fleet is reviewed and an alternate approach to propulsion system safety analysis is developed, based on this accident history. Features of the alternate approach include quantified prediction of propulsion related crew error, engine-level reliability growth modelling to realistically predict engine failure rates, and quantified credit for design features which mitigate the effects of propulsion system failures. The alternate approach is validated by applying it to two existing propulsion systems. It is found to produce forecasts in good agreement with service experience. Use of the alternate approach to propulsion system safety analysis during design and development will enable accurate prediction of the expected propulsion related accident rate and identification of opportunities to reduce the accident rate by incorporating mitigating features into the propulsion system/ aeroplane design.
author2 Fielding, John
author_facet Fielding, John
Knife, S.
author Knife, S.
spellingShingle Knife, S.
Propulsion system safety analysis methodology for commercial transport aircraft
author_sort Knife, S.
title Propulsion system safety analysis methodology for commercial transport aircraft
title_short Propulsion system safety analysis methodology for commercial transport aircraft
title_full Propulsion system safety analysis methodology for commercial transport aircraft
title_fullStr Propulsion system safety analysis methodology for commercial transport aircraft
title_full_unstemmed Propulsion system safety analysis methodology for commercial transport aircraft
title_sort propulsion system safety analysis methodology for commercial transport aircraft
publisher Cranfield University
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1826/4256
work_keys_str_mv AT knifes propulsionsystemsafetyanalysismethodologyforcommercialtransportaircraft
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