EDWARD BALABAN

Member since: Feb 19, 2011, NASA Ames

Airborne Electro-Mechanical Actuator Test Stand for Development of Prognostic Health Management Systems

Shared by EDWARD BALABAN, updated on Jun 08, 2011

Summary

Author(s) :
Edward Balaban, Abhinav Saxena, Sriram Narasimhan, Indranil Roychoudhury, Kai Goebel, Michael Koopmans
Abstract

With the advent of the next generation of aerospace systems equipped with fly-by-wire controls, electromechanical actuators (EMA) are quickly becoming components critical to safety of aerospace vehicles. Being relatively new to the field, however, EMA lack the knowledge base compared to what is accumulated for the more traditional actuator types, especially when it comes to fault detection and prognosis. Scarcity of health monitoring data from fielded systems and prohibitive costs of carrying out real flight tests create the need to build high-fidelity system models and design affordable yet realistic experimental setups. The objective of this work is to build an EMA test stand that, unlike current laboratory stands typically weighing in excess of one metric ton, is portable enough to be easily placed aboard a wide variety of aircraft. This stand, named the FLEA (for Flyable Electromechanical Actuator test stand), allows testing EMA fault detection and prognosis technologies in flight environment, thus substantially increasing their technology readiness level – all without the expense of dedicated flights, as the stand is designed to function as a non-intrusive secondary payload. No aircraft modifications are required and data can be collected during any available flight opportunity: pilot currency flights, ferry flights, or flights dedicated to other experiments. The stand is currently equipped with a prototype version of NASA Ames developed prognostic health management system with models aimed at detecting and tracking several fault types. At this point the team has completed test flights of the stand on US Air Force C-17 aircraft and US Army UH-60 helicopters and more experiments, both laboratory and airborne, are planned for the coming months.

show more info
Publication Name
N/A
Publication Location
N/A
Year Published
N/A

Files

PHM_2010_FLEA.pdf
904.6 KB 326 downloads

Discussions

Add New Comment

EDWARD's Projects (2)

  • test

    1 members

  • FLEA

    8 members

    24 resources

Need help?

Visit our help center