Electrical equipment evolution in civil aeronautics
- Posted by doEEEt Media Group
- On September 7, 2021
- 0
For many years, Airbus and Boeing aircraft manufacturers have been moving toward a more electric aircraft, gradually replacing equipment traditionally powered by mechanical or hydraulic power with electric power. This move paves the way for increased reliability, better efficiency and availability, reduced mass and optimized maintenance. As a well-known designer and manufacturer of magnetic components for the aerospace industry, Exxelia is impacted by this evolution, well beyond the growing market it represents.
Electrical force
What is the electric power level in a modern, medium-haul, civil aircraft? The Boeing 787 can deliver peak power for a few minutes at nearly 1,000 kW, while the Airbus A320neo can deliver nearly 600 kW. Only about 15% of the equipment in this generation of aircraft is electrical, which suggests that although the power involved is already significant, the scope for progress is still enormous.
Is it possible to increase power without exceeding the limit of electrical equipment in an aircraft? Experts say no. Many constraints in terms of weight, volume and costs make this impossible. Yet, various methods can be used to overcome this difficulty, like improving equipment efficiency or equipment sharing through the management of a network.
Figure 2: Roughly 15% of today’s aircraft equipment is electrical Source: Safran for generating, transporting and distributing electrical energy. Of course, the number and power of electrical equipment will increase slightly, but become more and more specific and complex because of the multiple functions they will have to satisfy, and all of the equipment will have to work together without disruption.
Electrical equipment design
The primary consequence of this mutation impacts the design of electrical equipment, which is often composed of energy conversion chains. The combination of several cascaded converters must be designed via a multi-physical approach, taking into account power electronics, thermals, and mechanics at the very least.
In recent years, several technological revolutions have considerably improved the performance of converters and at higher switching frequencies. Wideband gap transistors (gallium nitride, silicon carbide) have considerably reduced switching losses. Progress made in microelectronics has allowed development of control, drive and regulation circuits (field-programmable gate arrays, microcontroller units), which also work much more quickly. To improve performance, researchers and engineers also worked on the converter structure and developed more efficient architectures and topologies. This led to the generalization of previously atypical operating principles, such as all forms of soft or resonant switching, as well as dual/multiple active bridges.
However, these technological innovations have made the operating principles of converters more complex to study and understand. This is particularly true for one fundamental element of converters: magnetic components (MC).
The way MCs are used is innovative and no longer resembles what was taught about electromagnetism in engineering school. To understand how an MC works, it is necessary to analyze and understand how the converter where the MC has inserted works, and then identify the worst case of operation. This depends on a large number of parameters, including the converter input voltage, frequency, and temperature, so that the MC delivers the expected performances in all possible configurations of use. In other words, designing the MC needs certain skills in power electronics.
The increase in power level combined with the requirement to miniaturize electrical equipment increases the thermal challenge imposed on the MC, which will heat more in a smaller space. During the design step, it is therefore essential to evaluate the thermal behavior of the MC as accurately as possible to define and approach its thermal limits and achieve an optimal balance between size (a MC that is too large or heavy) and reliability (an MC that heats up too much will not be reliable). Designing MCs now also requires a minimum level of thermal competence.
Finally, there is the challenge of industrialization, which is the reproducibility in manufacturing, both on the key functions of the MC and on their tolerances. It is a matter of controlling, not canceling, the defects and drawbacks of the MC.
The innovative operation of converters takes advantage of the defects of the MCs. These defects must remain relatively stable from one copy to another. The technologies and manufacturing processes chosen to produce the MCs must make it possible to obtain values of leakage inductance and parasitic capacitances that are not variable. At the design step, this requires mathematical models available to accurately assess the values of these defects. There are even some converters that use the saturation property of magnetic components to limit the energy to be stored or released under certain conditions. It is then necessary to design the component, an inductance in general, at the middle of the saturation curve of its magnetic circuit, which is contrary to historical habits in this field.
The example below shows that the complex and innovative aspects of converters have a direct impact on the design of MCs.
The converter shown in the figure below has only been used in aeronautics for about 15 years. It is a 12-phase rectifier with three stages: an autotransformer, followed by two groups of six diodes, then two interphase chokes. The rectifier creates a 270 V (or 540 V) DC network from the 115 V (or 230 V), 400 Hz, three-phase network generated by the aircraft’s engines. This topology was studied a few decades ago by a team of international researchers and industrialists who wanted to use this more efficient topology first had to understand the team’s scientific publications. It turned out that the unavoidable defects of the two magnetic components significantly degrade the functioning of the rectifier. Exxelia’s design team had to understand all these aspects before developing a design method for these two atypical MCs. One objective was to reduce the impact of the defects of the two MCs on the rectifier operation.
The professions of electrical equipment designer and magnetic component designer are both evolving at high speeds and are increasingly linked to each other. MC designers can no longer simply use the few rules of electromagnetism learned at school combined with the experience acquired at his or her company. They must now be interested in the converter in which their component will operate, and must evaluate the thermal behavior of the component. The designer must also control and define the manufacturing process that will control the defects of the components — all at an increasingly competitive price.
Source: Electronics 360 article
by Bruno Cogitore, Marie Evrard and Rebecca Charles for Exxelia
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