Architecting aircraft power distribution systems via redundancy allocation

Recently, the environmental impact of aircraft and rising fuel prices have become an increasing concern in the aviation industry. To address these problems, organizations such as NASA have set demanding goals for reducing aircraft emissions, fuel burn, and noise. In an effort to reach the goals, a m...

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Main Author: Campbell, Angela Mari
Other Authors: Mavris, Dimitri
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53087
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-530872015-02-05T15:35:21ZArchitecting aircraft power distribution systems via redundancy allocationCampbell, Angela MariPower systemsReliabilityTurboelectric propulsionSystem architectingDynamic modelingGlobal optimizationStochastic flow networkAdmittance space analysisNyquist stabilitySuperconducting cablesState-space modelingRecently, the environmental impact of aircraft and rising fuel prices have become an increasing concern in the aviation industry. To address these problems, organizations such as NASA have set demanding goals for reducing aircraft emissions, fuel burn, and noise. In an effort to reach the goals, a movement toward more-electric aircraft and electric propulsion has emerged. With this movement, the number of critical electrical loads on an aircraft is increasing causing power system reliability to be a point of concern. Currently, power system reliability is maintained through the use of back-up power supplies such as batteries and ram-air-turbines (RATs). However, the increasing power requirements for critical loads will quickly outgrow the capacity of the emergency devices. Therefore, reliability needs to be addressed when designing the primary power distribution system. Power system reliability is a function of component reliability and redundancy. Component reliability is often not determined until detailed component design has occurred; however, the amount of redundancy in the system is often set during the system architecting phase. In order to meet the capacity and reliability requirements of future power distribution systems, a method for redundancy allocation during the system architecting phase is needed. This thesis presents an aircraft power system design methodology that is based upon the engineering decision process. The methodology provides a redundancy allocation strategy and quantitative trade-off environment to compare architecture and technology combinations based upon system capacity, weight, and reliability criteria. The methodology is demonstrated by architecting the power distribution system of an aircraft using turboelectric propulsion. The first step in the process is determining the design criteria which includes a 40 MW capacity requirement, a 20 MW capacity requirement for the an engine-out scenario, and a maximum catastrophic failure rate of one failure per billion flight hours. The next step is determining gaps between the performance of current power distribution systems and the requirements of the turboelectric system. A baseline architecture is analyzed by sizing the system using the turboelectric system power requirements and by calculating reliability using a stochastic flow network. To overcome the deficiencies discovered, new technologies and architectures are considered. Global optimization methods are used to find technology and architecture combinations that meet the system objectives and requirements. Lastly, a dynamic modeling environment is constructed to study the performance and stability of the candidate architectures. The combination of the optimization process and dynamic modeling facilitates the selection of a power system architecture that meets the system requirements and objectives.Georgia Institute of TechnologyMavris, Dimitri2015-01-12T20:52:56Z2015-01-12T20:52:56Z2014-122014-11-17December 20142015-01-12T20:52:56ZDissertationapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/53087en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Power systems
Reliability
Turboelectric propulsion
System architecting
Dynamic modeling
Global optimization
Stochastic flow network
Admittance space analysis
Nyquist stability
Superconducting cables
State-space modeling
spellingShingle Power systems
Reliability
Turboelectric propulsion
System architecting
Dynamic modeling
Global optimization
Stochastic flow network
Admittance space analysis
Nyquist stability
Superconducting cables
State-space modeling
Campbell, Angela Mari
Architecting aircraft power distribution systems via redundancy allocation
description Recently, the environmental impact of aircraft and rising fuel prices have become an increasing concern in the aviation industry. To address these problems, organizations such as NASA have set demanding goals for reducing aircraft emissions, fuel burn, and noise. In an effort to reach the goals, a movement toward more-electric aircraft and electric propulsion has emerged. With this movement, the number of critical electrical loads on an aircraft is increasing causing power system reliability to be a point of concern. Currently, power system reliability is maintained through the use of back-up power supplies such as batteries and ram-air-turbines (RATs). However, the increasing power requirements for critical loads will quickly outgrow the capacity of the emergency devices. Therefore, reliability needs to be addressed when designing the primary power distribution system. Power system reliability is a function of component reliability and redundancy. Component reliability is often not determined until detailed component design has occurred; however, the amount of redundancy in the system is often set during the system architecting phase. In order to meet the capacity and reliability requirements of future power distribution systems, a method for redundancy allocation during the system architecting phase is needed. This thesis presents an aircraft power system design methodology that is based upon the engineering decision process. The methodology provides a redundancy allocation strategy and quantitative trade-off environment to compare architecture and technology combinations based upon system capacity, weight, and reliability criteria. The methodology is demonstrated by architecting the power distribution system of an aircraft using turboelectric propulsion. The first step in the process is determining the design criteria which includes a 40 MW capacity requirement, a 20 MW capacity requirement for the an engine-out scenario, and a maximum catastrophic failure rate of one failure per billion flight hours. The next step is determining gaps between the performance of current power distribution systems and the requirements of the turboelectric system. A baseline architecture is analyzed by sizing the system using the turboelectric system power requirements and by calculating reliability using a stochastic flow network. To overcome the deficiencies discovered, new technologies and architectures are considered. Global optimization methods are used to find technology and architecture combinations that meet the system objectives and requirements. Lastly, a dynamic modeling environment is constructed to study the performance and stability of the candidate architectures. The combination of the optimization process and dynamic modeling facilitates the selection of a power system architecture that meets the system requirements and objectives.
author2 Mavris, Dimitri
author_facet Mavris, Dimitri
Campbell, Angela Mari
author Campbell, Angela Mari
author_sort Campbell, Angela Mari
title Architecting aircraft power distribution systems via redundancy allocation
title_short Architecting aircraft power distribution systems via redundancy allocation
title_full Architecting aircraft power distribution systems via redundancy allocation
title_fullStr Architecting aircraft power distribution systems via redundancy allocation
title_full_unstemmed Architecting aircraft power distribution systems via redundancy allocation
title_sort architecting aircraft power distribution systems via redundancy allocation
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53087
work_keys_str_mv AT campbellangelamari architectingaircraftpowerdistributionsystemsviaredundancyallocation
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