International Aircraft Fire and Cabin Safety Conference: Fuel Tank Inerting Modeling by Ivor Thomas, Consultant to FAA

International Aircraft Fire and Cabin Safety Conference: Fuel Tank Inerting Modeling by Ivor Thomas, Consultant to FAA
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This presentation at the International Aircraft Fire and Cabin Safety Conference discusses fuel tank inerting modeling, which was examined by the

About International Aircraft Fire and Cabin Safety Conference: Fuel Tank Inerting Modeling by Ivor Thomas, Consultant to FAA

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Slide1International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Fuel Tank Inerting Modeling Ivor Thomas Consultant to FAA 1 425 455 1807 fuelsguy@msn.com

Slide2International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Background • Following TWA 800 the FAA undertook to examine fuel tank inerting to determine if a system could be made practical. – Two ARAC studies – FAA lab, ground and flight test programs – Computer simulations of system performance

Slide3International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Computer simulations of system performance • Initial model to verify system performance in a single bay tank, using FAA Technical Center tests to confirm model. • Flight simulation model to look at performance of an inerting system throughout a flight • Air Separation Module (ASM) performance in flight (effects of available bleed air, system pressure drop etc.) • Multi-bay simulations to examine in-tank performance (potential for one or more high oxygen bays when the tank average is satisfactory)

Slide4International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Initial Model • Model Features: – Simple one bay tank, – Single source of Nitrogen Enriched Air, at a fixed level of O2 – Single vent overboard – Sea level conditions only

Slide5International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Initial Model • Model Results: – Mixing was very rapid, and could be assumed to be instantaneous – Starting from 21 % O2 model would predict test results accurately

Slide6International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference

Slide7International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Flight Model • Model Features: – Simple one bay tank, – Single source of Nitrogen Enriched Air, at a variable level of O2 and flow rate • Changeable for different flight conditions • Could add results of ASM performance for given airplane/engine combination – Single vent overboard – Ground and Flight profiles can be simulated. – Fuel O2 Evolution and Fuel consumption included

Slide8International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Flight Model • Model Results: – Very useful in determining effectiveness of inerting options • Ground based inerting • Various sizes of ASM and flow modes • Substantiated concept of variable flow technique, low flow in climb and cruise, high flow in descent

Slide9International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Ground Based Inerting

Slide10International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Ground Based Inerting

Slide11International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Dual-Flow On Board Inerting

Slide12International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Dual Flow On board Inerting

Slide13International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Air Separation Module (ASM) • ASM performance strongly affected by available pressure and temperature • Airplane bleed flow affected by airplane flight conditions. • Model combined airplane/engine bleed data with ASM performance data to predict ASM performance in flight, which could then be used in the inerting flight model.

Slide14International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Screen Dump of ASM Model

Slide15International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Typical Single ASM Performance

Slide16International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Multi-bay simulations • Background: • The performance of an inerting system can be estimated with the inerting flight model at a gross tank level. • In-tank effects needed to  be examined to understand the potential for bays of a tank to be left at a high O2 state even though the tank average O2 was acceptable.

Slide17International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Multi-bay simulations • Model Features: – Specific airplane /tank set-up • Bay sizes • Interconnect flow areas • vent geometry, – Multiple NEA insertion points – Ground and Flight Operation – Leakage

Slide18International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Multi-bay simulations • Model Approach: – Establish bay to bay flow paths, vent flow paths and any leakage flows – Determine mass changes in each bay for each time increment, based on NEA flow and altitude change and temperature change – Solve for flows between bays and compute resultant O2 level in each bay – Iterate along flight path

Slide19International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference

Slide20International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Current Status • FAA Multi-bay model developed for specific tanks • NOT available to public as the model uses specific airplane data • Specific model allows examination of different distribution techniques to minimize bay-to-bay O2 variation, particularly at Landing.

Slide21International Aircraft Fire andCabin Safety Conference Conclusions • FAA computer models, together with a large amount of testing to verify the assumptions in the models have allowed the FAA to understand the potential for On-board inerting systems and has allowed FAA to go forward towards an NPRM to address high flammability fuel tanks.

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