This invention relates generally to the aviation field, and more specifically to a new and useful command and control system and method in the aviation field.
Command and control systems are important to the operation of aircraft. However, as the number of electrically powered components that use and/or generate data increases, the addition of separate power and data transfer systems can increase aircraft weight, production costs, and operating costs. In addition, conventional command and control systems often rely on the determinism of the data to process the state of the aircraft, which can lead to system failure in situations where data is corrupted or where uncertainty is otherwise introduced into the system. Electromagnetic interference (EMI) can cause certain data transfer protocols to be corrupted, and can particularly harm command and control system operation in systems with inadequate redundancy. Optical data transfer methodologies employed to overcome EMI typically require a separate power transfer network, which adds weight, cost, and other disadvantages. Conventional power transfer systems can also suffer from various disadvantages, including the complete or partial loss of downstream power in daisy-chained power networks upon failure of an upstream component.
Thus, there is a need in the aviation field to create a new and useful command and control system/method. This invention provides such a new and useful system/method.
The following description of preferred embodiments of the invention is not intended to limit the invention to these preferred embodiments, but rather to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use this invention.
1. Overview
As shown in
The system 100 functions to provide redundant and fault-tolerant power and data connections between flight components. Flight components may be flight computers 130 and/or flight devices 120, which can include flight-critical components (e.g., components providing core flight functionality to the aircraft 105) and non-flight-critical components (e.g., components providing functionality to non-flight-related portions of the aircraft and/or non-critical flight-related portions of the aircraft). Additionally or alternately, flight components may include one or more power sources 140 and/or any other appropriate components. The system 100 can also function to reduce and/or eliminate the number of single-point failure interfaces in an aircraft control system. The system 100 can also function to manage component failure (e.g., by isolating component and/or data failures) during aircraft operation to reduce and/or prevent failure propagation. The system can also function to provide duplicative (e.g., redundant, multiply redundant, etc.) power and/or data transmission to flight components and/or between flight components.
Power and data transfer between flight components (e.g., flight devices, flight computers) utilizing the distribution network can be performed according to various protocols and/or techniques. Preferably, the distribution network and flight components are configured according to a power-over-Ethernet (PoE) protocol and/or methodology. The PoE protocol can be standard (e.g., standardized according to an IEEE 802.3 standard, IEEE 802.3af-2003, IEEE 802.3at-2009, PoE+/PoE plus, 802.3bt, Alternative A, Alternative B, 4PPoE, a custom protocol, etc.), ad-hoc, or otherwise suitably configured. However, any other suitable shared power and data transmission protocol or cabling can be used (e.g., power-line communication, HomePlug AV, etc.). Power connections and data connections can be at least partially shared (e.g., power is transmitted over at least one wire on which data is also transmitted), and in some variations can be entirely overlapping (e.g., all wires used for transmitting data also transmit power) to minimize the number of connectors, cables, individual signal and/or power lines, and related components; alternatively, power and data connections can be made between components using different wires within a single cable (e.g., wherein the cable includes a plurality of wires and a first subset of the plurality are dedicated to data transmission and a second subset of the plurality are dedicated to power transmission). However, in further alternative variations, data and power connections can be entirely separate. The Ethernet variant utilized in the PoE configuration can be of any suitable type (e.g., 10 Mbit/s, 100 Mbit/s, Gigabit, etc.). Shared data and power connections may supply less than 20 Watts, more than 20 Watts, 12.95 Watts, between 20 Watts and 100 Watts, 25.50 Watts, 51 Watts, 71 Watts, or any other suitable amount of power. However, the system can otherwise suitably provide both data connections and/or electric power to flight components that produce and/or consume data, utilizing any suitable hardware and/or software standard or technique.
The term “rotor” as utilized herein, in relation to the control system or otherwise, can refer to a rotor, a propeller, and/or any other suitable rotary aerodynamic actuator. While a rotor can refer to a rotary aerodynamic actuator that makes use of an articulated or semi-rigid hub (e.g., wherein the connection of the blades to the hub can be articulated, flexible, rigid, and/or otherwise connected), and a propeller can refer to a rotary aerodynamic actuator that makes use of a rigid hub (e.g., wherein the connection of the blades to the hub can be articulated, flexible, rigid, and/or otherwise connected), no such distinction is explicit or implied when used herein, and the usage of “rotor” can refer to either configuration, and any other suitable configuration of articulated or rigid blades, and/or any other suitable configuration of blade connections to a central member or hub. Likewise, the usage of “propeller” can refer to either configuration, and any other suitable configuration of articulated or rigid blades, and/or any other suitable configuration of blade connections to a central member or hub. Accordingly, the tiltrotor aircraft can be referred to as a tilt-propeller aircraft, a tilt-prop aircraft, and/or otherwise suitably referred to or described.
The control system is preferably implemented in conjunction with an aircraft (e.g., the system can include an aircraft), but can additionally or alternatively be used with any other suitable vehicle (e.g., scooter, automobile, etc.). In particular, the aircraft is preferably a rotorcraft, but can additionally or alternatively include any suitable aircraft. The rotorcraft is preferably a tiltrotor aircraft with a plurality of aircraft propulsion systems (e.g., rotor assemblies, rotor systems, etc.), operable between a forward arrangement and a hover arrangement. However, the rotorcraft can alternatively be a fixed wing aircraft with one or more rotor assemblies or propulsion systems, a helicopter with one or more rotor assemblies (e.g., wherein at least one rotor assembly or aircraft propulsion system is oriented substantially axially to provide horizontal thrust), and/or any other suitable rotorcraft or vehicle propelled by rotors. The rotorcraft preferably includes an all-electric powertrain (e.g., battery powered electric motors) to drive the one or more rotor assemblies, but can additionally or alternatively include a hybrid powertrain (e.g., a gas-electric hybrid including an internal-combustion generator), an internal-combustion powertrain (e.g., including a gas-turbine engine, a turboprop engine, etc.), and any other suitable powertrain.
The aircraft (or vehicle) can be: automatically controlled (e.g., be an autonomous vehicle; controlled by the control system, etc.), manually controlled (e.g., piloted by a user), controlled by a hybridized control system (e.g., controlled by the control system, based on or in conjunction with user inputs), and/or otherwise controlled.
In a specific example of the control system, the system includes an electric tiltrotor aircraft including a plurality of tiltable rotor assemblies (e.g., six tiltable rotor assemblies). The electric tiltrotor aircraft can operate as a fixed wing aircraft, a rotary-wing aircraft, and in any liminal configuration between a fixed and rotary wing state (e.g., wherein one or more of the plurality of tiltable rotor assemblies is oriented in a partially rotated state). The control system of the electric tiltrotor aircraft in this example can function to command and control the plurality of tiltable rotor assemblies within and/or between the fixed wing arrangement and the rotary-wing arrangement.
2. Benefits
Variations of the system can afford several benefits and/or advantages.
First, variations of the system can mitigate, reduce, and/or eliminate aircraft reliance on determinism in a single source of flight data. For example, the system can utilize a switching rate (e.g., data update rate) faster than a shortest dynamic timescale associated with aircraft control (e.g., aerodynamic control), such that the impact of a singular data error (e.g., packet error, error in the output of a single data source, etc.) is minimized and/or otherwise reduced. Additionally or alternatively, variations of the control system can obtain a persistent (e.g., temporally persistent) description of the aircraft state (e.g., from data collected and/or generated by one or more flight data sources), such that a momentary and/or temporary signal loss or degradation (e.g., from a flight data source) does not have a substantial adverse impact on nominal aircraft operation (e.g., on operation of one or more flight data sinks, on aircraft control, etc.). Variations of the control system can additionally or alternatively utilize voting schemes (e.g., ranked voting schemes, unranked voting schemes, etc.) for determining which control input to use among a set of control inputs (e.g., received from multiple flight data sources).
Second, variations of the system can reduce the quantity of data transfer connections without reducing the degree of data redundancy. For example, as shown in
Third, variations of the system can enable the use of less reliable flight components (e.g., flight devices, flight data sinks, flight data sources, etc.) by increasing the reliability of the data transmission network. Such variations can reduce overall aircraft cost by enabling the use of lower cost, less individually-reliable components (e.g., components having a lower design assurance level) without reducing overall system reliability. Such variations can also increase overall system reliability without increasing overall system cost by increasing the aggregate reliability of a system utilizing fixed cost components.
Fourth, variations of the system can make the aircraft robust to unplanned external damage sources (e.g., electrical or mechanical inputs). For example, as shown in
Fifth, variations of the system can prevent a marginal failure (e.g., failure in non-flight critical hardware, failure of fewer than the total number of redundant flight components for a particular purpose, etc.) from escalating into a serious failure (e.g., unknown aircraft state, loss of aircraft command and control ability, etc.) by maintaining a persistent state awareness of the aircraft (e.g., based on a plurality of redundant aircraft state information and associated failure status information).
Sixth, variations of the system can electrically, communicably, and/or physically isolate switch sets from each other. This can ensure truly redundant control message transmission, as the switch sets do not communicate with each other. This can also confer additional electrical protection by isolating excess current (e.g., from electrical overloading or short circuiting) to the originating switch set and/or forcing the excess current to flow through intermediate connections (e.g., the flight components and/or flight computers), which can function as circuit breakers or fuses and preclude excess current transmission to the remainder of the control system.
Seventh, variations of the system can directly communicably isolate the flight computers, such that the flight computers independently determine the control messages (e.g., based on a shared control system state or aircraft state, based on shared sensor information and fault information, etc.). This can reduce the number of control messages that are propagated and/or reinforced through the control system.
However, variations of the system can additionally or alternatively provide any other suitable benefits and/or advantages.
3. System
As shown in
The flight components function to collect and/or utilize flight data as a flight data source and/or flight data sink, respectively. The flight components can also function to actuate aeromechanical components of the aircraft, determine the state of an actuator of the aircraft, receive control inputs (e.g., from a human pilot, from a control module, etc.) related to aircraft operation, and/or have any other suitable function related to aircraft flight and/or operation. The flight components can also function as networked devices (e.g., networked via the distribution network). The flight components are preferably powered flight components (e.g., requiring electrical power) and can function to consume electrical power in the performance of other functions; however, one or more flight components can be otherwise suitably powered. The flight components can additionally or alternatively have any other suitable function related to facilitating operation (e.g., flight, landing, take-off, etc.) of the aircraft.
The flight components can include one or more: mission displays, radios, flight computers, data loggers or acquisition devices, vehicle navigation systems (VNS), one or more cabin systems (e.g., powered devices within the cabin of the aircraft, powered devices that control environmental parameters of the cabin of the aircraft, etc.), avionics gateways, air data booms, battery management systems (BMS), heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning (HVAC) components, inceptors, inverters (e.g., a quad inverter, a standard inverter, etc.), battery management systems (BMS), flight devices (e.g., that control surfaces, such as ailerons, flaps, rudder fins, landing gear, etc.), sensors (e.g., kinematics sensors, such as IMUs; optical sensors, such as cameras; acoustic sensors, such as microphones and radar; temperature sensors; altimeters; pressure sensors; and/or any other suitable sensor), and any other suitable components related to aircraft flight. Flight components can additionally or alternately include: a sensor fusion module, a flight path vector module, data acquisition cards, a data acquisition logger, and an Ethernet radio module.
Various flight components can be considered flight-critical components. A flight-critical component is preferably a flight component for which nominal operation is especially desired during aircraft operation; however, any suitable flight component can be designated as a flight-critical component. The system can include any suitable number of any of flight-critical components, and any suitable flight components can be considered flight-critical components.
Various flight components can be considered non-flight-critical components. A non-flight-critical component is preferably a flight component for which nominal operation may be desired but is not critical for nominal aircraft operation (e.g., during flight); however, any suitable flight component can additionally or alternatively be designated as a non-flight-critical component.
The distinction between flight-critical components and non-flight-critical components can be static (e.g., determined based on the intrinsic characteristics of the flight component) or dynamic (e.g., determined based on the context of the flight component). For example, a flight component can be designated as a flight-critical component in system examples wherein the flight component is the only functional instance of its type (e.g., in scenarios wherein only a single instance is used in the system, in scenarios wherein duplicative instances of the flight component have failed or stopped operating within nominal ranges, etc.). In another example, a flight component can be non-critical irrespective of the context (e.g., wherein an off-the-shelf data logger for auxiliary data is non-critical in embodiments where the off-the-shelf data logger is the only instance of its component type incorporated into the system).
A flight component can operate as a flight data source. A flight data source functions to provide flight data to one or more components of the system (e.g., one or more flight data sinks) by way of the distribution network. In a system example including an aircraft that includes an air data boom, the air data boom can operate as a flight data source that provides flight data defining air pressure, temperature, and airflow direction relative to the aircraft (e.g., relative to the air data boom itself).
A flight component can operate as a flight data sink. A flight data sink functions to receive flight data from one or more components of the system (e.g., one or more flight data sources) by way of the distribution network. The flight data sink can also function to transform flight data for utilization by other flight components and provide the transformed flight data to other flight components (e.g., acting as a flight data source). Flight data preferably includes sensor measurements and component states, but can additionally or alternatively include commands (e.g., control messages; operation instructions; etc.) or any other suitable set of data. An example of a flight data sink includes the flight computers, which can receive measurements, state reports, fault logs, and/or any other suitable set of data from the flight data sources (e.g., remainder of the flight components). Flight components can operate as both a flight data source and flight data sink during system operation (e.g., consuming and utilizing flight data as well as transforming and/or providing flight data), but flight components can additionally or alternatively operate exclusively as a flight data source or flight data sink during system operation.
The plurality of flight components preferably includes one or more flight computers. The flight computer functions to transform flight data into commands that can be transmitted to and interpreted by controllable flight components (e.g., actuators, instruments, etc.). In variations including a plurality of flight computers, each of the plurality of flight computers can be a substantially identical instance of the same computer architecture and components, but can additionally or alternatively be instances of distinct computer architectures and components (e.g., generalized processors manufactured by different manufacturers). The flight computers can include: CPUs, GPUs, TPUs, ASICs, microprocessors, and/or any other suitable set of processing systems.
In variations, each of the flight computers performs substantially identical operations (e.g., processing of data, issuing of commands, etc.) in parallel, and is connected (e.g., via the distribution network) to the same set of flight components. In such variations, the output of each flight computer is provided to each flight component by way of the distribution network such that each flight component receives duplicative flight data generated by each of the flight computers. In one example, each flight computer can be redundantly connected to each component by multiple switch sets; however, each flight computer can be connected to each flight component (e.g., directly, indirectly) by a single switch set or otherwise connected to the flight components.
The flight computers may generate commands based on aircraft state information. The flight computers may receive, as inputs, information from the same or different switch sets. The flight computers preferably receive the same set of data (e.g., sensor measurements, device faults, etc.) from the same set of flight components (e.g., same sensors, same devices, etc.), but can additionally or alternatively receive different data, receive data from different flight components (e.g., wherein the flight components can be redundant across flight computers), and/or receive any other suitable set of data. The flight computers preferably receive data at substantially the same time (e.g., delayed by less than 1 ms, 10 ms, etc.), but can additionally or alternatively receive the data asynchronously (e.g., wherein the data is timestamped), or receive data at any other suitable time. The flight computers preferably generate commands at substantially the same time (e.g., in synchrony; wherein the flight computers are synchronized to a common clock, wherein the flight computers generate the commands at substantially the same processing rate or frequency, etc.), but can additionally or alternatively generate commands with any appropriate frequency, period, and/or event. Redundant commands generated by the flight computers may or may not be temporally offset (e.g., by 1-50 ms, fraction of command generation period, synchronous or asynchronous command generation, etc.).
Flight computers can be distributed with any appropriate geometry or relationship. Flight computers may be distributed: linearly (e.g., parallel with or aligned along the pitch or roll axes as shown in
In variations, the flight computers can be distributed within the aircraft to increase reliability and survivability of the command and control system. For example, a first flight computer can be arranged proximal a nose of the aircraft, a second flight computer can be arranged proximal a tail boom of the aircraft, and a third flight computer can be arranged proximal a center of mass of the aircraft and/or a wing of the aircraft. In related examples, the plurality of flight computers can be arranged to maximize the relative distance between the flight computers in relation to the aircraft. In further examples (e.g., as shown in
The flight computers may be electrically isolated by a shield or electrical insulation. The flight computers can be electrically isolated from: other flight computers, flight components (e.g., devices, switches, power sources, etc.), the aircraft body or portions thereof (e.g., electrically conductive components, etc.), and/or any other suitable component. The shield or electrical insulation can include: a Faraday cage (e.g., mesh or enclosure made of conductive material grounded to an electrical ground, such as the aircraft frame), rubberized casings, spatial separation, and/or any other suitable material. In a first example, flight computers are isolated within an enclosure, which is preferably grounded to the aircraft frame (e.g., frame is composite material with integrated copper mesh acting as a Faraday cage) and/or an electrically conducting pathway. The flight computer may be fully or partially encapsulated, may be in the same or a different enclosure from one or more switches, may be in the same or a different enclosure from other flight computer(s), and/or may be electrically isolated in any appropriate manner. Most preferably, the flight computer is located by itself in a dedicated enclosure (e.g., Faraday cage style enclosure, composite with integrated copper mesh, etc.) containing no other switches, computers, or other component, but can additionally or alternately be electrically isolated relative to any appropriate devices/flight components. In a second example, flight computers are electrically isolated relative to a conducting pathway for the aircraft (e.g., with at least one flight computer on either side of the conducting pathway, at least one flight computer on either side of the conducting pathway from a top and/or side view).
The flight computers are preferably communicatively isolated from each other, but may alternately operate based on indirect or direct communication with other flight computers. In a first example, flight computers operate independently of one another, have no information about the data received or transmitted by other flight computers, and have no direct communication pathway to other flight computers. In a second example, flight computers have an indirect communication pathway to other flight computers (e.g., through one or more switches, through flight components or operation thereof). In a first variant, the indirect communication pathway transfers information between the flight computers. In a second variant, this indirect communication pathway transmits no information between the flight computers. In a third example, there is a cable directly connecting each at least two of the flight computers, and the flight computers cross-check commands (before, during, or after commands are transmitted to flight components).
The flight components acting as flight data sources, including the flight computers, preferably transmit fault status information in addition to other flight data related to component function. In turn, flight data sinks that utilize the flight data can determine the reliability of the incoming flight data (e.g., redundant flight data and/or instructions) and determine which flight data from among multiple substantially duplicative flight data sets to use (e.g., to execute the instructions or commands). For example, flight data sinks can implement a weighted voting scheme on redundant instruction sets accompanied by fault status information, to discount received flight data that is associated with low reliability and/or a fault status indicator indicating a failure of any suitable type, in favor of reliable data and/or data associated with a fault status indicator indicating no fault and/or the absence of a fault status indicator. However, flight components can otherwise suitably utilize redundant flight data to increase overall system reliability.
The distribution network functions to transfer electrical power and/or flight data between flight components of the system for command and control. The distribution network can include switches (power and/or data switches), and cables (e.g., power and/or data cables; bundles of electrically conductive physical connections).
The physical configuration of the distribution network is preferably substantially identical for power distribution and data distribution, with respect to each flight component, for a given power and data stream (e.g., the electrical power and flight data required for nominal flight component operation). Thus, in variations wherein a flight component requires both electrical power and flight data, the required electrical power and flight data are preferably provided to the flight component by at least one power and data switch over a single cable (e.g., associated with the required electrical power and flight data). In variations wherein a flight component requires only one of electrical power and flight data, either electrical power or flight data is preferably provided to the flight component over a single cable from a power and data switch, a power switch, and/or a data switch, respectively. However, the distribution network can have different configurations for power and data, or be otherwise configured.
The distribution network may include a physical connection between the power source(s) and each flight component. The physical connection functions to transmit the electrical power from the power source(s) to each flight component requiring electrical power. The physical connection is preferably directly between at least one battery of the power source(s) and a power switch (e.g., a power and data switch, a PoE switch, etc.) and directly between the power switch and each respective flight component, such that the power switch mediates the power provision to each flight component. The physical connection between a battery and a switch is preferably a direct conductive connection (e.g., a wired connection), and can be of any suitable type (e.g., high voltage transmission line, high power transmission cabling, etc.), and the connection between the switch and each flight component is preferably in an Ethernet-compatible form factor (e.g., a category 5 cable, category 3 cable, etc.); however, the physical connections for power transmission can be of any other suitable form factor.
The distribution network includes physical connections (e.g., power and/or data ports) between flight data sources and flight data sinks, by way of the one or more switches. The physical connection functions to transmit flight data in the form of electrical signals. As described above, the physical connections for data are preferably coextensive with the physical connections for power for physical links between the switch(es) and flight components, and data transmission is can be performed via the same cables of the distribution network (e.g., category 5 cable, category 3 cable, etc.). The form factor of each connection can be identical for each flight component, or different for specific flight components (e.g., category 5 or better for high power components, category 3 for low power components, any compatible cable form factor for flight component requiring only data transmission without power, etc.).
Each flight component preferably includes the same number of physical connections as switch sets in the distribution network (e.g., independent switch sets), wherein each physical connection is independently connected to a different switch set, but can additionally or alternatively include more or less physical connections (e.g., wherein the flight component is connected to a subset of the switch sets in the distribution network in the latter case). The physical connections (e.g., ports, cables) for a given flight component can be the same or different. The physical connections for different flight components can be the same or different. The physical connections preferably transmit redundant (e.g., the same) data between the flight component and the distribution network, but can additionally or alternatively transmit different data.
For example, each flight component is preferably connected to the distribution network by at least two physical connections (e.g., corresponding to different switch sets), and each of the two physical connections preferably transmits duplicate flight data and/or electrical power (e.g., wherein the loss of one of the two physical connections would enable the flight component to remain powered and/or suitably communicative with other components of the flight control system). The two physical connections are preferably made via separate cables (e.g., category 5 cables), but in alternative variations the two distinct, duplicative connections can be made via different sets of wires within the same cable. In still further variations, each flight component can be connected to the distribution network by any suitable number of physical connections.
The routing of redundant physical connections (e.g., the two physical connections as described above) between the one or more switches and associated flight components is preferably different for each physical connection (e.g., cable). Different cable routes for each connection can function to increase reliability and/or survivability of the connection, in the event that one of the connections is damaged, interfered with, or otherwise disturbed based on its position within the aircraft. The cable routes can vary in: physical arrangement on the aircraft, or cable type (e.g., cable class, rating, etc.), or otherwise vary. Redundant cabling (e.g., between the same two components, between a flight component and redundant switch sets, etc.) preferably has the same length or comparable data transmission speeds (given the respective cable length), but can additionally or alternatively have different lengths. However, in alternative variations, the redundant physical connections can be similarly or substantially identically routed between the switch(es) and the flight components.
In variants, the distribution network can include one or more cables that communicably, electrically, and/or physically connect flight components (e.g., flight devices, flight computers, power sources, etc.) together (e.g., as discussed above). The cables are preferably network cables (e.g., local area network cables), more preferably power and data cables (e.g., PoE cables, optical fiber, coaxial cable, serial cable, USB, a bus, etc.), but can additionally or alternatively be a set of power cables, data cables, and/or any other suitable cable. In examples, the cabling can include twisted pair Ethernet cabling, custom cabling, and/or any other suitable set of cabling. The cabling used to connect different component sets can be the same or different. Each cable preferably connects a pair of components, but can additionally or alternatively connect three or more components together.
The distribution network can include a plurality of switches 110. The switches function as gateways for directly-connected flight components (e.g., flight computers, devices, power sources, etc.) into the network, and can optionally: selectively route data, control power provision, and/or perform any other suitable functionality. Each of the plurality of switches is preferably a power and data switch, and more preferably a PoE switch (e.g., a switch configured to provide data transfer according to an Ethernet protocol and configured to provide power-over-Ethernet) that can function as a piece of power sourcing equipment (PSE) in accordance with a PoE standard as described above; however, the switches can additionally or alternatively be any other suitable network data switch, which may or may not be configured to additionally source power to connected devices in variations. Each of the plurality of switches can also function to transfer flight data (e.g., raw flight data, transformed flight data, etc.) between connected flight components.
The switches may communicate data (e.g., commands) from the flight computers to flight components (e.g., sinks, flight devices, etc.), may transfer power from the power source(s) (e.g., battery) to flight components (flight computers and flight devices) (e.g., via PoE, over the data cables, over the spare pairs, etc.), and may communicate data (e.g., aircraft state information) from flight components to flight computers. The data can be transferred using: transmission, broadcast, unicast, multicast, or any appropriate data transmission. Data may be commands, aircraft state information, and/or any other appropriate data. Aircraft state information may include faults (fault indicator, fault status, fault status information, etc.); sensor readings or information collected by flight components such as speed, altitude, pressure, GPS information, acceleration, user control inputs (e.g., from a pilot or operator), measured motor RPM, radar, images, or other sensor data; component status (e.g., motor controller outputs, sensor status, on/off, etc.); and/or any other appropriate information. Commands may include faults (fault indicator, fault status, fault status information, etc.); control commands (e.g., commanding rotor RPM (or other related parameter such as torque, power, thrust, lift, etc.), data to be stored, commanding a wireless transmission, commanding display output, etc.); and/or any other appropriate information.
Switches within the plurality of switches may be arranged in series, in parallel, or grouped into switch sets (which may, themselves, be in series or in parallel), or connected in any appropriate manner.
Switches may be grouped into one or more switch sets 115 (e.g., 2 sets, 4 sets, any appropriate number of sets). A switch set functions to redundantly communicate the same information between the same flight components connected to the respective switch set, but can additionally or alternatively provide power to the flight components connected to the respective switch set, or perform any other suitable functionality.
A switch set may include one or more switches (e.g., 4). Preferably, a switch set includes three or more switches (as shown in
Preferably, switch sets are communicatively isolated, but the switch sets can additionally or alternately communicate in any appropriate manner. In a specific example, switch sets provide parallel communication channels between flight components, accept the same inputs, and return the same outputs. The switch sets can operate with any appropriate timing, communication frequency (continuous, periodic, event driven, etc.), with any appropriate relationship to data and/or other switches (e.g., synchronously, asynchronously), or in any appropriate manner. In a first variant, the switch sets can be indirectly communicatively connected (e.g. via an intermediate flight component/switch) with no communication pathway crossing the common node(s). In a second variant, switches in the first set do not directly communicate with switches in the second set (this may include: no knowledge of faults in the other switch set(s), no direct exchange of data between the switch sets, no direct exchange of power between the switch sets, and/or any appropriate implementation. In a third variant, there is no cable directly connecting switch sets. Additionally or alternately, switch sets may be communicatively isolated in any appropriate manner.
The switch sets are preferably electrically isolated, but can additionally or alternatively be electrically connected. Different switch sets are preferably electrically connected to different power sources, but can additionally or alternatively be connected to the same power source.
Switches within a switch set can be the same or different. Switches within a switch set can be distributed with any appropriate geometry or relationship. Switches may be distributed: linearly (e.g., parallel with or aligned along the pitch or roll axes, additionally or alternately skewed or otherwise oriented, etc.); arranged in a single plane (e.g., above or below cabin, spanning the wing, plane defined by yaw and roll axes, or any arbitrary plane); distributed a predetermined distance away from aircraft components (e.g., offset by >1 m; offset by 2 m; offset by 5 m; a distance between 0.5 m-30 m; or any appropriate distance from: passengers, rotors, fuel tanks, batteries, landing gear, etc.); distributed relative to computers or flight components (e.g., positioned: within 1 meter, 1-3 meters, adjacent to, within the same housing/enclosure, etc.) near a flight computer, instance of a component (e.g., motor/inverter), group of components (e.g., cluster of non-critical flight systems), relative to the CG, etc.); spaced apart by minimum radius (switches within a switch set spaced apart, switch spaced apart from another switch set, etc.), wherein minimum radius (e.g. 1 meter, 50 cm, >1 meter, any appropriate minimum radius) is related to electrical arc path, conductive pathway, or impact survivability (e.g., determined by crash test, modeling or historic data relating to: fires (and fire shielding), explosive components, decompression, lightning, charge neutralization, bird strike, user impacts, other sources of damage, etc.) such as in areas unlikely to be affected by same/similar source of damage (e.g. in front of cockpit, below passengers, behind luggage, rear of aircraft) and additionally or alternately can be based on spatial constraints, user safety, accessibility, wiring length, determined relative to standard cable and/or wire lengths, or otherwise arranged; or arranged arbitrarily in 3 dimensions in any appropriate manner.
Preferably, there is a direct connection between a switch set and each flight component, but additionally or alternately a switch set can be connected to a subset of flight components, connected to flight components indirectly (e.g., flight components are wired to each other, communication and/or power passes through one or more flight components), or connected in any appropriate manner.
A different switch within each switch set is preferably connected to (e.g., directly connected to, acts as a gateway for) a different flight computer of the system. In this specific variant, if one switch within a switch set is inoperable, only one computer generated command is affected. However, a given switch within a switch set can be connected to (e.g., directly connected to) multiple flight computers, or otherwise connected to the flight computers.
A different switch within each switch set is preferably connected to (e.g., directly connected to, acts as a gateway for) a different flight component of the system. In this specific variant, if one switch within a switch set is inoperable, only one flight component is affected. However, a given switch within a switch set can be connected to (e.g., directly connected to) multiple flight components, or otherwise connected to the flight computers.
A different switch within each switch set is preferably connected to (e.g., directly connected to, acts as an ingress point for) a different power source of the system. In this specific variant, if one switch within a switch set is inoperable, only one power source is cut off from the rest of the system. However, a given switch within a switch set can be connected to (e.g., directly connected to) multiple power sources (e.g., power sources shared between switch sets), or otherwise connected to the power source(s) of the system.
The switches may be electrically isolated (e.g., from each other, from the other switch set, from other flight components, from flight computers, from the aircraft, etc.). In a first example, switches are isolated within an enclosure, which is preferably grounded to the aircraft frame (e.g., frame is composite material with integrated copper mesh acting as a Faraday cage) and/or an electrically conducting pathway. The switch may be fully or partially encapsulated, may be in the same or a different enclosure from other switches (e.g., those in the same switch set, from switches in different a switch set from switches connected to same/similar flight components, etc.), may be in the same or a different enclosure from flight computer(s) to which it is communicatively coupled, and/or may be electrically isolated in any appropriate manner. Most preferably, the switch is located by itself in a dedicated enclosure (e.g., Faraday cage style enclosure, composite with integrated copper mesh, etc.) containing no other switches, computers, or other component, but can additionally or alternately be isolated relative to any appropriate components.
The system may include an auxiliary switch or auxiliary switch set which may communicate with one or more switch sets (e.g., first and/or second switch sets), and which may have non-critical flight components as flight devices (e.g., sensor fusion, FPV, NI DAQ, DAQ Logger, Ethernet radio, etc.).
The switches can be configured to provide power (e.g., power-over-Ethernet) at various electrical power levels (e.g., to various components of differing power requirements) and data at various data rates (e.g., to various components of differing data rate and/or bandwidth requirements). For example, a switch can be configured to provide gigabit Ethernet, gigabit 13 W PoE, 10 Mbit 13 W PoE, 100 Mbit 13 W PoE, gigabit 71 W PoE, and/or any other suitable combination of data rate and power level, from any suitable connection port of the switch.
In a specific example, the distribution network includes three switches, wherein two of the three switches are PoE switches connected to a first subset of flight components and the third switch is connected to a second subset of flight components, wherein the subsets are non-overlapping. The first subset of flight components in this example are flight-critical components (e.g., as described above), and the second subset of flight components are non-flight-critical components (e.g., as described above). However, in related examples, the distribution network can include any suitable number of switches, connected to the set of flight components in any suitable network configuration (e.g., entirely overlapping redundant connections, entirely distinct sets of connections, partially overlapping connections, etc.).
In a specific example (as shown in
In a first variant of the specific example, the system includes 4 batteries in—2 connected to the first switch set and 2 connected to the second switch set. In a second variant, the system includes 2 batteries, which are both connected to the first switch set and the second switch set.
In a different specific example (as shown in
The power source 140 functions to (wholly or in part) power aircraft operations (which may include powering computers, powering switches, powering flight components and/or any other appropriate components) with one or more power sources arranged into one or more power source sets.
The one or more power sources preferably include at least one battery, and more preferably a plurality of batteries arranged in various locations throughout the aircraft, but can additionally or alternatively include any suitable power source (e.g., a generator, an electromechanical energy converter, an alternator coupled to a combustion-driven engine or motor, a photovoltaic power source, a ground-based charging station, etc.). Most preferably, the power source includes four or more batteries arranged into two power source sets, with one power source set powering each switch set, but can additionally or alternately have any appropriate numerosity and arrangement. Power source arrangements may be: distributed about the aircraft (e.g., relative to the CG, based on impact survivability, spaced apart by a minimum radius, relative to aircraft components/computers/switches), based on spatial constraints (such as cabin dimensions and/or proximity to passengers), and/or distributed in any other appropriate fashion. Preferably, the power source supplies power to switches from redundant sets (e.g., one or more batteries) connected to each switch in switch set, but additionally or alternately one or more power sources (or set of power sources) may be connected to a set of the switches (e.g., 1, 2, 3, etc.) in each switch set. Preferably, redundant power sources supply power to different switch sets within a switch set, but can additionally or alternately supply power in any appropriate manner (e.g., supply power in series or parallel or any combination thereof). Each power source (or subunit therein) can be connected to one or more switch sets or switches within a given switch set. In a first variant, a power source set is directly connected to a single switch set. In a second variant, a power source set is directly connected to a single switch. In a third variant, a power source set is connected to each switch within a switch set. Each switch set or switch within a switch set can be connected to one or more power source sets (or subunit therein).
The power sources (e.g., batteries, battery packs, set of battery packs), power source sets, and/or subunits therein (e.g., battery cells within a battery pack) may be partially of fully electrically isolated by a shield or electrical insulation. The power source(s) can be electrically isolated from: flight computers, flight components (e.g., devices, switches, power sources, etc.), the aircraft body or portions thereof (e.g., electrically conductive components, etc.), and/or any other suitable component. The shield or electrical insulation can include: a Faraday cage (e.g., mesh or enclosure made of conductive material grounded to an electrical ground, such as the aircraft frame), rubberized casings, spatial separation, and/or any other suitable material. Additionally or alternately, the system may include secondary enclosures for batteries/cells within a battery (battery pack) with additional insolation employing the same or different insulating techniques from the pack as a whole. Power connections between batteries may additionally or alternately have any other appropriate protections (e.g., breakers, protection circuits, etc.) to avoid failures propagating to other cells/batteries. Cells within a battery (battery pack) may be organized in series or in parallel, or in any combination thereof. Each battery preferably has a battery management system (BMS) which can be controlled via the distribution network, but additionally or alternately the system may include any appropriate number of BMS's controlling the power sources in any appropriate manner. Batteries are preferably rechargeable batteries, but may additionally or alternately be any other suitable type of battery with any suitable chemistry. Batteries chemistries may be: SLA, RAM, NiZn, NiFe, NiCd, NiH2, NiMH, LSD NiMH, LTO, LCO, LFP, NCA, NMC, or other appropriate battery chemistry.
In a first example, a battery is isolated inside an enclosure which is preferably grounded to the aircraft frame (e.g., frame is composite material with integrated copper mesh acting as a Faraday cage) and/or an electrically conducting pathway. Most preferably, each battery has a dedicated enclosure (e.g., Faraday cage style enclosure, composite with integrated copper mesh, etc.) which is electrically isolated relative to any appropriate devices/flight components. In a second example, batteries are electrically isolated relative to a conducting pathway for the aircraft (e.g., with at least one battery on either side of the conducting pathway, at least one battery on either side of the conducting pathway from a top and/or side view).
In a specific example, a first and second battery are connected to a first PoE switch, and a third and fourth battery are connected to a second PoE switch; however, in related examples, a plurality of batteries can be connected to a plurality of PoE switches with any suitable correspondence (e.g., one-to-one correspondence, one-to-many correspondence, many-to-one correspondence, etc.).
The aircraft may be equipped with lightning protections including a conducting pathway(s) (designed to ground components and/or divert lightning away from critical components), a conducting mesh (e.g., may be integrated into a composite aircraft frame/structure/body, copper mesh, etc.), conducting enclosures (e.g., including electromagnetic-shielding, EMI enclosures, Faraday cages) for various components, and/or any other suitable lightning protections. In variants, the conducting pathway arrangement can be determined based on: flight component arrangement, electrical arc paths throughout the aircraft, aircraft axes (e.g., extend along or parallel the pitch, yaw, and/or roll axes), and/or be otherwise determined.
As shown in
However, the system can include any other suitable set of components.
4. Method
The method S700 (as shown in
Optional collecting aircraft state information S710 functions to collect aircraft state information from redundant flight components (e.g., sensors) to be used for command/control of the aircraft. Preferably, this data collected in S710 is communicated via the distribution network, but can additionally or alternately be transmitted via wired/wireless communication or otherwise stored/used. Preferably, the same aircraft state information is collected by multiple sources (e.g., multiple instances of the same sensor, multiple types of sensors collecting the same type of data), but alternately can operate in any appropriate manner. S710 preferably occurs before S720, but may happen with any appropriate relationship to any step in the method.
Receiving aircraft state information functions S720 to communicate redundant inputs to the flight computers. This may include aircraft state information collected by flight components as in S710, but can additionally or alternately include other data from external sources, stored data, and/or other data. Preferably, each flight computer receives aircraft state information independently, but can additionally or alternately communicate and/or cross check data with other flight computers. Aircraft state information preferably includes sensor information, state information, faults, and/or any other appropriate data. Preferably, redundant aircraft state information can be independently received from one or more switch sets, and the source of truth can be determined by the flight computer based on a voting scheme or other approach. S720 preferably occurs before S730, but may happen with any appropriate relationship to any step in the method.
Generating redundant commands based on the aircraft state information S730 functions to perform redundant computing for command/control operations for the aircraft. Preferably, commands are generated by each computer independently (synchronously or asynchronously) based on aircraft state information received by the flight computer but can additionally or alternately occur in any appropriate manner. The commands are preferably generated by different computers using the same methods (e.g., algorithms), but can additionally or alternatively be generated using different methods. Preferably, S730 is performed after S720 and before S735, but can be performed with any appropriate relationship to any step in the method.
Communicating the redundant commands to the flight components S735 functions to send commands to flight components via one or more switch sets. The communication may occur synchronously or asynchronously, with any appropriate data frequency/event/sequence, or in any appropriate manner. Preferably, commands are sent via redundant switch sets and addressed to the same component(s). In a first example, communicated data packets can identify a source flight computer, which may be used for voting schemes to determine a selected command. In a second example, communicated data packets can identify a flight component (or set thereof, such as a redundant set), which may be used for voting schemes to determine a selected command. S735 is preferably performed after S730 and before S740, but may be performed with any appropriate relationship to any step in the method.
Optional determining a selected command based on a voting scheme S740 functions to ensure that redundant flight computers agree and faulty commands are ignored. S740 may be based wholly or in part on the commands and/or fault indicators. S740 may be performed wholly or in part by a switch, a switch set, and/or the flight component. In a first example (illustrated in
Executing the selected command S750 functions to perform operations based on the redundant aircraft command/control. Preferably, S750 is performed by flight component(s), but additionally or alternately may be performed wholly or in part by any other appropriate component. S750 is preferably performed after S740, but may be performed with any appropriate relationship to any step in the method.
However, the method can otherwise provide fault-tolerant command and control.
The system and/or method of the preferred embodiment and variations thereof can be embodied and/or implemented at least in part as a machine configured to receive a computer-readable medium storing computer-readable instructions. The instructions are preferably executed by computer-executable components preferably integrated with and/or part of the system. The computer-readable medium can be stored on any suitable computer-readable media such as RAMs, ROMs, flash memory, EEPROMs, optical devices (CD or DVD), hard drives, floppy drives, or any suitable device. The computer-executable component is preferably a general or application specific processor, but any suitable dedicated hardware or hardware/firmware combination device can alternatively or additionally execute the instructions.
Although omitted for conciseness, the preferred embodiments include every combination and permutation of the various system components, which can be combined in any suitable permutation or combination and/or omitted in whole or in part from variations of the preferred embodiments.
As a person skilled in the art will recognize from the previous detailed description and from the figures and claims, modifications and changes can be made to the preferred embodiments of the invention without departing from the scope of this invention defined in the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of US Provisional Application No. 62/732,374, filed Sep. 17, 2018, which is incorporated in its entirety by this reference.
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