OBIGGS for Fuel System Water Management - Proof of Concept

Event
Aerospace Technology Conference and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Fuel on-board dehydration during flight technologies has been modeled and experimentally studied on a laboratory testing setup in normal specific gas flow rates range of 0.0002-0.0010 sec-₁. Natural air evolution, ullage blowing and fuel sparging with dry inert gas have been studied. It has been shown that natural air evolution during aircraft climb provides a significant, substantial, but insufficient dehydration of fuel up to 20% relative. Ullage blowing during cruise leads to a constant, but a slow dehydration of fuel with sufficient column height concentration gradient. Dry inert gas sparging held after the end of the natural air evolution or simultaneously with natural air evolution provides rapid fuel dehydration to the maximum possible values. It potentially may eliminate water release and deposition in fuel to -50°C. It has been found that for proper dehydration, necessary and sufficient volume of dry inert gas to volume of fuel ratio is about 1.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2011-01-2793
Pages
12
Citation
Merkulov, O., Zherebtsov, V., Peganova, M., Kitanin, E. et al., "OBIGGS for Fuel System Water Management - Proof of Concept," SAE Int. J. Aerosp. 4(2):1465-1474, 2011, https://doi.org/10.4271/2011-01-2793.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Oct 18, 2011
Product Code
2011-01-2793
Content Type
Journal Article
Language
English