By David McNally
ARL Public Affairs
Armor is good protection against an enemy, but what if the enemy is so small that it takes aircraft down from the inside? Sand and dust can significantly damage a helicopter engine, which is why the Department of Defense is united in its hunt for a technology solution to protect aviators from this dangerous enemy.
At the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, scientists and engineers experiment with coatings in high-temperature environments with the goal of creating something — anything — that will cause sand to slide off the inside of a turbine engine the way an egg slides off a nonstick skillet.
“We are going through a very methodical process to understand the underpinning science and then use the science to predict the materials, what we call the engineered or tailored materials, that will lead to the right solution,” explained Dr. Anindya Ghoshal, chief scientist for the laboratory’s Vehicle Technology Directorate.
Ghoshal leads the Army’s efforts to develop what he calls “sandphobic” coatings.
“We are facing, especially in Southwest Asia, and other places, brown-out conditions,” he said. “We have a lot of dust particles that blow out, especially when you’re hovering. We get these sand particulates and other dust particulates that get ingested into the engine.
“Our goal is to have the particles strike the blades or vanes [inside a gas turbine engine] and then flake off,” he said. “When we started looking into this problem, we found that in order to look at a very basic research level we want to understand the physical chemical behavior. Once we can do that, then our idea is to take that model and then predict the type of material that would enable us to develop this sandphobic coating.”
Helicopters have filtration systems that attempt to filter out larger particles, but Ghoshal said micron-sized particles go through the turbine’s combustor and adhere to the blades. This chokes the airflow and can lead to engine loss.
“We have a unique rig here,” said Dr. Michael Walock, a physicist on the sandphobic coatings team. “The hot particulate ingestion rig allows us to shoot sand into the hot-gas flow at small level components and rapidly prototype new coating materials. With this system we’ve done a world-first. We used high-speed imaging to confirm the molten state of the sand particles impacting onto these thermal barrier coatings.”
Computer simulations are also helping researchers arrive at a technology solution.
“Computer modeling will play a big role in helping us to look at the interactions between particles and the surface,” said Dr. Muthuvel Murugan, acting team lead for the lab’s Turbomachinery Research Team. “The particles go through a phase change from solid to liquid and then they deposit onto the surface.”
At the Army’s Vehicle Research Laboratory, the team shot high-speed videos, revealing molten sand particles splattering on turbine blade material targets and then vaporizing – a first in the scientific community.
“Computer modeling of this multi-physics complex phenomena will allow us to understand the damage mechanisms,” he said.
Murugan said they hope to use the power of supercomputers at the DOD High Performance Computing Center also located at APG.
“We will use advanced computational fluid dynamics together with particle ingestion to better understand the interaction mechanisms of sand particles at gas turbine engine relevant high temperature,” he said. “When we simulate how particles go through the flow-field and impact and adhere to the surface, then we can understand the vulnerable parts of the turbine blade and engineer a sandphobic coatings solution.”
Sandphobic coatings research is part of a larger strategic effort the Army lab officials call the Science for Maneuver Campaign.
“With this campaign, we hope to discover, innovate and transition science and technology-enabled capabilities that will significantly increase the force effectiveness and global responsiveness of the Army,” said acting ARL Director Dr. Philip Perconti. “As we look to how we’re going to enable the Army of the future, we see a need to discover technology solutions that will result in improvements in aviation responsiveness and the minimization of vulnerabilities.”
Earlier this year, Ghoshal’s team received DOD funding through the Laboratory University Collaboration Initiative, or LUCI, which means $600,000 over three years in collaboration with a National Security Science and Engineering Faculty fellow. Ghoshal is teaming with Dr. Jian Luo at the University of California San Diego.
“There is a close collaboration going on within the community to solve this problem,” Ghoshal said.
Ghoshal is also working closely with other universities, industry and government agencies, such as The Ohio State University; University of Connecticut; University of North Texas; Iowa State University; University of North Dakota; Boeing; the U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Research, Development and Engineering Center; the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory; the U.S. Naval Air Systems Command; and NASA.
In 2015, the team presented initial findings, “Turbomachinery Blade Thermomechanical Interface Science and Sandphobic Coatings Research,” to the American Helicopter Society International 71st Annual Forum at Virginia Beach, Virginia. The paper received the “Best Paper Award in Propulsion Sessions at the conference, Ghoshal said.
New research from the team will also be published in the January 2017 Advances in Aircraft and Spacecraft Sciences, an international journal.
“I strongly believe that in the next three to five years we will have not only one, but several solutions,” Ghoshal said. “It will definitely save a lot of Soldiers’ lives in the long run. Our solutions will make our Soldiers’ lives safe and will make our Army stronger.”
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from Armed with Science http://ift.tt/2f9v8wr
By David McNally
ARL Public Affairs
Armor is good protection against an enemy, but what if the enemy is so small that it takes aircraft down from the inside? Sand and dust can significantly damage a helicopter engine, which is why the Department of Defense is united in its hunt for a technology solution to protect aviators from this dangerous enemy.
At the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, scientists and engineers experiment with coatings in high-temperature environments with the goal of creating something — anything — that will cause sand to slide off the inside of a turbine engine the way an egg slides off a nonstick skillet.
“We are going through a very methodical process to understand the underpinning science and then use the science to predict the materials, what we call the engineered or tailored materials, that will lead to the right solution,” explained Dr. Anindya Ghoshal, chief scientist for the laboratory’s Vehicle Technology Directorate.
Ghoshal leads the Army’s efforts to develop what he calls “sandphobic” coatings.
“We are facing, especially in Southwest Asia, and other places, brown-out conditions,” he said. “We have a lot of dust particles that blow out, especially when you’re hovering. We get these sand particulates and other dust particulates that get ingested into the engine.
“Our goal is to have the particles strike the blades or vanes [inside a gas turbine engine] and then flake off,” he said. “When we started looking into this problem, we found that in order to look at a very basic research level we want to understand the physical chemical behavior. Once we can do that, then our idea is to take that model and then predict the type of material that would enable us to develop this sandphobic coating.”
Helicopters have filtration systems that attempt to filter out larger particles, but Ghoshal said micron-sized particles go through the turbine’s combustor and adhere to the blades. This chokes the airflow and can lead to engine loss.
“We have a unique rig here,” said Dr. Michael Walock, a physicist on the sandphobic coatings team. “The hot particulate ingestion rig allows us to shoot sand into the hot-gas flow at small level components and rapidly prototype new coating materials. With this system we’ve done a world-first. We used high-speed imaging to confirm the molten state of the sand particles impacting onto these thermal barrier coatings.”
Computer simulations are also helping researchers arrive at a technology solution.
“Computer modeling will play a big role in helping us to look at the interactions between particles and the surface,” said Dr. Muthuvel Murugan, acting team lead for the lab’s Turbomachinery Research Team. “The particles go through a phase change from solid to liquid and then they deposit onto the surface.”
At the Army’s Vehicle Research Laboratory, the team shot high-speed videos, revealing molten sand particles splattering on turbine blade material targets and then vaporizing – a first in the scientific community.
“Computer modeling of this multi-physics complex phenomena will allow us to understand the damage mechanisms,” he said.
Murugan said they hope to use the power of supercomputers at the DOD High Performance Computing Center also located at APG.
“We will use advanced computational fluid dynamics together with particle ingestion to better understand the interaction mechanisms of sand particles at gas turbine engine relevant high temperature,” he said. “When we simulate how particles go through the flow-field and impact and adhere to the surface, then we can understand the vulnerable parts of the turbine blade and engineer a sandphobic coatings solution.”
Sandphobic coatings research is part of a larger strategic effort the Army lab officials call the Science for Maneuver Campaign.
“With this campaign, we hope to discover, innovate and transition science and technology-enabled capabilities that will significantly increase the force effectiveness and global responsiveness of the Army,” said acting ARL Director Dr. Philip Perconti. “As we look to how we’re going to enable the Army of the future, we see a need to discover technology solutions that will result in improvements in aviation responsiveness and the minimization of vulnerabilities.”
Earlier this year, Ghoshal’s team received DOD funding through the Laboratory University Collaboration Initiative, or LUCI, which means $600,000 over three years in collaboration with a National Security Science and Engineering Faculty fellow. Ghoshal is teaming with Dr. Jian Luo at the University of California San Diego.
“There is a close collaboration going on within the community to solve this problem,” Ghoshal said.
Ghoshal is also working closely with other universities, industry and government agencies, such as The Ohio State University; University of Connecticut; University of North Texas; Iowa State University; University of North Dakota; Boeing; the U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Research, Development and Engineering Center; the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory; the U.S. Naval Air Systems Command; and NASA.
In 2015, the team presented initial findings, “Turbomachinery Blade Thermomechanical Interface Science and Sandphobic Coatings Research,” to the American Helicopter Society International 71st Annual Forum at Virginia Beach, Virginia. The paper received the “Best Paper Award in Propulsion Sessions at the conference, Ghoshal said.
New research from the team will also be published in the January 2017 Advances in Aircraft and Spacecraft Sciences, an international journal.
“I strongly believe that in the next three to five years we will have not only one, but several solutions,” Ghoshal said. “It will definitely save a lot of Soldiers’ lives in the long run. Our solutions will make our Soldiers’ lives safe and will make our Army stronger.”
Follow the Department of Defense on Facebook and Twitter!
———-
Disclaimer: The appearance of hyperlinks does not constitute endorsement by the Department of Defense of this website or the information, products or services contained therein. For other than authorized activities such as military exchanges and Morale, Welfare and Recreation sites, the Department of Defense does not exercise any editorial control over the information you may find at these locations. Such links are provided consistent with the stated purpose of this DOD website.
from Armed with Science http://ift.tt/2f9v8wr
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