Title: Simulator Status, FAA WJ Hughes Technical Center
1Simulator Status,FAA WJ Hughes Technical Center
- Completed since the April 1999, Seattle meeting
- Simulator Inlet
- A 22 foot long, 22 inch diameter inlet duct has
been installed to feed the blower - Transducer to measure airflow installed
- hot wire anemometer in duct center line
- treat inlet flow as "classic" parabolic
distribution and derate velocity by 10 to
determine mass flow rates - calibration curve still being worked out
- Air flow heating
- core heating assembly installed
- in-line duct heaters are wired
- locked out, not serviceable
- incorrect part installed replacement expected
within the week - On-going
- hot plates
- ALL hot plate materials on-site
- assembly for plate 1 completed this week
- plate 2 expected by the end of October
- will require testing exterior to the simulator
prior to placement (control software and final
assembly validation) - dry ice looking to produce on-site
2High Bypass Ratio Turbofan Simulator - Core
Heating Impact on ByPass Air Flow
3HFC-125 Distribution Comparison, Simulator
Environment, 30Jul99
HFC-125 Distribution Comparison, Average
Distribution Comparisons, 30Jul99
4HFC-125 - h125.99.730.05.ambient.c
Bottle volume 600 in3 Agent
weight 5.44 lbf Agent storage
pressure 650 psig Agent storage temp 200
F Air flow temp 92F Air flow
4.3 lbm/s
HFC-125 - h125.99.730.02.hot.c
Bottle volume 600 in3 Agent
weight 5.44 lbf Agent storage
pressure 650 psig Agent storage temp 200
F Air flow temp 215F Air flow
3.5 lbm/s
5Simulating the Distribution of Halon 1301 in an
Aircraft Engine Nacelle with HFC-125
- 1994-1995. Actions sought to minimize the release
of Halon 1301 unnecessarily - DoD (U.S. Navy) sponsors work through the
National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST) to develop or discover a simulant for
Halon 1301 for use in nacelle discharge testing - The cumulative effort also involves Boeing,
Walter Kidde Aerospace (WKA), and Shorts
Brothers, PLC - NIST reviewed existing material data bases for
materials having - characteristics commensurate with the application
of nacelle discharge testing - characteristics comparable to Halon 1301 during
discharge in this application - Jakob number
- Saturated vapor pressure
- Experimental history
- Atmospheric lifetime (ODP and ALT)
- 3 candidates selected
- CHClF2
- SF6
- C2HF5 (HFC-125, pentafluoroethane)
6Simulating the Distribution of Halon 1301 in an
Aircraft Engine Nacelle with HFC-125
- Field Work
- NIST
- USN, WKA on the F-18
- Boeing on the Pratt and Whitney PW 4084 on the
B777 airframe - Shorts Brothers, PLC on the Allied Signal
TFE731-40 on the IAI Astra SPX airframe - Conclusions
- HFC-125 most effectively simulates a Halon 1301
discharge in these applications - US military specification Mil-E-22285 edited to
reflect such procedures - Additional field work, April 1998.
- FAA personnel assisting USN on agent distribution
within the F-18 nacelle - As courtesy to the FAA, a simulant test pair is
run - Results reflect previous results
- Historical review indicates overdesign far
outweighs the delta found between agents in the
simulation - FAA publishes technical note on the concept
- Qualitative discussion regarding limitations
- the simulation appears to be sensitive to the
ventilation rate of the compartment compare
cargo and nacelle environments (forced vs.
natural/gravitationally driven ventilation) - recent work at the FAATC indicates agent
temperature likely plays a role in the
simulation effectiveness
7Simulating the Distribution of Halon 1301 in an
Aircraft Engine Nacelle with HFC-125
- Procedures.
- Agent Storage
- Calculate/determine required weight of Halon 1301
for application - multiply desired Halon 1301 weight by 0.77 to
determine the required weight of HFC-125 for the
simulation - load and superpresurize with N2 as would be done
for the design Halon 1301 bottle - cold soak the bottle
- perform test
- Halonyzer operation
- the analyzer is configured for HFC-125
- capture the simulant test with the HFC-125
calibration curve as the analyzer reference - compare results to the certification criteria of
Halon 1301 - determine success or failure
- NOTE This procedure is not intended to provide
a method to determine a weight of HFC-125 for
fire suppression purposes. This process
delineates a method to use HFC-125 in a manner
which would reasonably simulate the discharge of
Halon 1301 in an aircraft engine nacelle from a
gaseous distribution perspective.
8Simulating the Distribution of Halon 1301 in an
Aircraft Engine Nacelle with HFC-125
- References.
- Kaufmann, K. J., Miller, M. P., Wozniak, G., and
Mitchell, M.D., 1995, "Results of Halon 1301 and
HFC-125 Concentration Tests on a Large Commercial
Aircraft Engine Installation," International
Halon Replacement Working Group Minutes, United
States Department of Transportation, Federal
Aviation Administration, W.J. Hughes Technical
Center, Atlantic City, NJ. - Ingerson, D. A., "Simulating the Distribution of
Halon 1301 in an Aircraft Engine Nacelle with
HFC-125," DOT/FAA/AR-TN99/64, United States
Department of Transportation, Federal Aviation
Administration, W.J. Hughes Technical Center,
Atlantic City International Airport, NJ. - Military Specification MIL-E-22285(AS), Amendment
3, 1996, "Extinguishing System, Fire, Aircraft,
High-Rate-Discharge Type. Installation and Test
of," United States Department of Defense,
Department of the Navy, Naval Air Systems
Command, Washington, D.C. - Mitchell, M. D., 1994, "Methodology for Halon
1301 Simulant Testing and Concentration
Equivalence Verification," Report No. R-5102,
Kidde Technologies, Wilson, NC. - Mitchell, M. D., 1995, "Full Scale Halon Simulant
Testing of F-18D Aircraft Using
Bromotrifluoromethane and Pentafluoroethane,"
Report No. R-5127, Kidde Technologies, Wilson,
NC. - Riordan, D., 1995, "Engine Fire Extinguisher
Agent Concentration Testing," International Halon
Replacement Working Group Minutes, United States
Department of Transportation, Federal Aviation
Administration, W.J. Hughes Technical Center,
Atlantic City, NJ. - Womeldorf, C. A., Grosshandler, W. L., 1995,
"Selection of a CF3Br Simulant for Use in Engine
Nacelle Certification Tests," Fire Suppression
System Performance of Alternative Agents in
Aircraft Engine and Dry Bay Laboratory
Simulations, SP890, Vol. 2, p.591-621, National
Institutes of Standards and Technology,
Gaithersburg, MD.
9Simulating the Distribution of Halon 1301 in an
Aircraft Engine Nacelle with HFC-125, Historical
Example of Overdesign
Lockheed C-140 Jet Star Concentration Profile at
N1 78 (Sommers, 1970, p. 34)
10Simulating the Distribution of Halon 1301 in an
Aircraft Engine Nacelle with HFC-125, Historical
Example of Overdesign
General Dynamics F/EF-111 Agent Concentration
Profile for Test 1301-8 (Chamberlain and Boris,
1988, p.57)
11Halon 1301 - h1301.99.923.01.c
Bottle volume 600 in3 Agent
weight 7.59 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 71F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s
HFC-125 - h125.99.927.01.c
Bottle volume 600 in3 Agent
weight 5.89 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 75F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s
12Halon 1301 - h1301.99.930.02.c
HFC-125 - h125.99.930.03.c
13Halon 1301 - h1301.99.a07.01.c
Bottle volume 300 in3 Agent
weight 4.25 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 63F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s
HFC-125 - h125.99.a07.02.c
Bottle volume 300 in3 Agent
weight 3.28 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 64F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s
14Halon 1301 - h1301.99.a07.04.c
Bottle volume 300 in3 Agent
weight 4.40 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 64F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s
HFC-125 - h125.99.a07.03.c
Bottle volume 300 in3 Agent
weight 3.39 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 64F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s
15Halon 1301 - h1301.99.a06.04.c
Bottle volume 300 in3 Agent
weight 4.00 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 70F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s
HFC-125 - h125.99.a06.02.c
Bottle volume 300 in3 Agent
weight 3.08 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 70F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s
16HFC-125 - h125.99.a06.01.c
Bottle volume 300 in3 Agent
weight 3.08 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 66F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s
HFC-125 - h125.99.a06.03.c
Bottle volume 300 in3 Agent
weight 3.08 lbf Agent storage
pressure 400 psig Agent storage temp 100
F Air flow temp 70F Air flow
2.3 lbm/s