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Modeling of Single Bay Fuel Tank Inerting for FAA OBIGGS Research

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Presentation on theme: "Modeling of Single Bay Fuel Tank Inerting for FAA OBIGGS Research"— Presentation transcript:

1 Modeling of Single Bay Fuel Tank Inerting for FAA OBIGGS Research
William Cavage AAR-440 Fire Safety Branch Wm. J. Hughes Technical Center Federal Aviation Administration International Systems Fire Protection Working Group Place de Ville Tower C Ottawa, Canada February 14-15, 2005

2 Outline Background Results of Modeling Methods Summary
Goals and Objectives Previous Work Analytical (calculation) Models Physical (scale) Models Results of Modeling Methods Analytical Model Scale A320 Tank in Altitude Chamber Summary AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

3 Background FAA has been developing and testing an OBIGGS for fuel tank inerting to illustrate the feasibility of light weight, simplified inerting systems to reduce flammability in commercial transport airplanes Modeling inert gas effects and distribution in commercial transport fuel tanks could assist in the development process and allow for cost effective systems analysis and trade studies Capitalize on previous FAA modeling work done in support of ground based inerting research (sea level inerting only) Models have to be simple to be useful in a cost analysis study or rulemaking exercise FAA has a relatively large amount of flight test data to validate any developed models AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

4 Previous Work – Ullage [O2] Calculation Model
Uses perfect mixing assumption and calculates the volume of oxygen in and out of tank at every time step Uses a basic spreadsheet iterating calculation and runs immediately given the volume of the tank, the flow rate and purity of the NEA Constant inerting only AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

5 Previous Work – Scale 747SP CWT
FAA built and performed tests in 24% scale 747SP (classic type) center-wing fuel tank Made from plywood using NTSB Shepherd report drawings Scaled all penetrations (holes) between bays and vent system Variable NEA deposit capability to allow for inerting of tank with scaled flows in each bay Oxygen concentration measured in each bay Model data duplicated full-scale results very well for localized deposit method studied AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

6 Scale Model Inerting Data Comparison
AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

7 Previous Work – Average [O2] Predictions
Regardless of methodology, all modeling methods predict bulk ullage oxygen concentration well AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

8 Modeling Method – Altitude Analytical Model
An analytical model of average ullage oxygen concentration based on inert gas added and altitude change was developed based on existing model Model changed from sea level model to calculate mass of oxygen added and removed at each time step, assuming perfect mixing, in a single bay tank given a tank volume and starting oxygen concentration Must input system performance (NEA flow and purity) in terms of time and altitude Calculates ullage gas removed from tank due to increase in altitude (decrease in pressure) to calculate mass of oxygen decrease in tank Calculates air entering tank due to decrease in altitude (increase pressure) to calculate mass of oxygen increase The model is a relatively simple time step spreadsheet that calculates instantaneously AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

9 Altitude Inerting Calculation Model Data Comparison
AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

10 Modeling Method – Scale A320 CWT
FAA built and performed tests in 50% scale Airbus A320 center-wing fuel tank Made from plywood using drawings given to us by Airbus in support of joint inerting flight test Scaled all structural members of tank inside down to the smallest detail Mass flow controller and NEA mixer used to inert the tank in altitude chamber Altitude oxygen analyzer used to track ullage with additional basic instrumentation AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

11 Block Diagram of Scale A320 CWT Experiment
AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

12 Results - Scale A320 CWT Model
Results indicate that duplication of the flight cycle with the system performance in the altitude chamber was accomplished with coordination of test personnel Measured scale tank oxygen concentration data illustrated good agreement with flight test results considering the large differences in measurement systems sample lag Localized oxygen concentration dynamics illustrated some fidelity when specific sample location data were compared with similar locations in the flight test aircraft AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

13 Full-Scale Data Compared with Scale System Performance
AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

14 Full-Scale Data Compared with Scale Model [O2] Results
AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

15 Local Full-Scale Measurement Compared with Scale Data
AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

16 Results – Comparison of Analytical & Scale Models
Performed mock trade study of system sizing with both scale and analytical models Studied effect of decreasing the size of the system by 25% and 50% Used the previous discussed Airbus v1972 Test Descent Data trends compared well as did the peak and resulting values with exception of peak 75% system performance (off by 1%) Modeling Data for System Size Comparison Ullage [O2] for Airbus v1972 Test Descent AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D

17 Summary Simple calculation models of average ullage oxygen concentration have been developed and can duplicate single bay flight test data in a fairly accurate manner Requires no unique engineering skills Very easy to develop and modify for a wide variety of flight cycles, OBIGGS capabilities and ullage conditions Scale models can be tested with an altitude facility in a relatively cost effective manner to give good agreement with flight test data Some specialized instrumentation and facilities needed Provides some ability to analyze internal flow dynamics AAR-440 Fire Safety R&D


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