The present invention relates an all fiber sensor architecture and method for use in embedded flight applications.
Modern aircraft are being developed which feature increasingly sophisticated propulsion systems. In particular, conventional gas turbine engines, SCRAMJET, rocket engine and pulse detonation engine technologies are being designed and built to power future generations of aircraft. In conjunction with the development of advanced engine technologies, airframe and aircraft skin technologies have advanced to develop suitable structures and flight surfaces to support the next generation of aircraft.
In many instances, the technologically advanced modern engine designs plus advanced flight surface structures require onboard feedback and control systems to assure that the various components are performing properly within specific design parameters. For example, the exterior flight surface temperature of a hypersonic aircraft must be monitored to assure that specific heat tolerances are not exceeded. Similarly, the combustion zone of a modern engine must be carefully monitored and controlled to assure that fuel is being used efficiently, maximum thrust is being developed and catastrophic engine failure is avoided. Conventional sensor and feedback technologies are in many instances poorly suited for the monitoring of the flight parameters of modern aircraft designs. A series of independently located and independently operated sensing subsystems can also lead to inconsistent data, since the various sensing subsystems may not be in communication with each other. Discrete sensing systems can also add excess weight and operational complexity. The present invention is directed toward overcoming one or more of the problems discussed above.
One aspect of the present invention is an embedded flight sensor system having a laser and one or more flight sensors in optical communication with the laser plus a data processing device in optical communication with the flight sensors. The flight sensors may be laser based optical components such as a fiber Bragg grating in combination with an optical detector, a spectroscopy grating and detector or an optical detector associated with catch optics. The parameters sensed by the flight sensors may be used to determine any flight parameter. Representative flight parameters include but are not limited to an airframe or external surface temperature, airstream velocity, combustion zone temperature, engine inlet temperature, a gas concentration or a shock front position.
The embedded flight sensor system will typically include multiple flight sensors coupled to the laser with an optical fiber network. In some embodiments, the output from one or more lasers may be configured to supply light to the system at multiple select wavelengths. In such an embodiment, the system may further include a multiplexer, router, circulator, splitter or other photonic component optically coupled to the multiple laser outputs and configured to provide and distribute multiplexed laser light of distinct wavelengths to one or more output optical fibers.
Another aspect of the present invention is a method of deploying a system of flight sensors. The method includes providing a laser coupled to an optical network which communicates with various optical sensors as described above and further communicates with at least one data processing device.
Additional aspects of the present invention include certain optical sensors. Optical sensors consistent with the present invention include a system for measuring an airframe or aircraft skin temperature at multiple locations which features multiple fiber Bragg gratings in optical communication through a network of optical fibers.
Another sensor consistent with the present invention is a system for measuring an engine inlet airstream velocity having multiple pitch and catch optic pairs configured to transmit and receive laser output through the engine inlet at various angles. The engine inlet airstream velocity system also includes a processor to compare the Doppler shift of the spectroscopic absorption curves calculated along various optical paths.
Another sensor consistent with the present invention is a system for determining the location of a shock front within an aircraft engine which includes a laser and multiple pairs of pitch and catch optics configured to project parallel beams through the internal cavity of an aircraft engine.
Another family of sensors consistent with the present invention includes a multiplexed laser source projected through the combustion chamber of an engine such that the laser light received may be spectroscopically analyzed to determine gas concentrations and combustion zone temperatures.
a and 5b: Graphic representation of O2 absorption curves illustrating Doppler shifting.
Optical Fiber Coupled Architecture
The present invention includes an optical fiber coupled system of laser-based sensors for measuring various parameters associated with powered flight. Also disclosed is an architecture for coupling the sensors together into a fully integrated package suitable for embedded flight applications. The ultimate goal of the system and architecture is to acquire data necessary to optimize engine or other flight parameters through feedback control. The system, architecture and sensor technology described herein are appropriate for conventional gas turbine propulsion systems as well as developing SCRAMJET, rocket engine, and pulsed detonation engine technologies. The system may include, but is not limited to, sensors to measure engine inlet flow speed, engine inlet oxygen concentration and temperature. In addition, the temperature and water concentration in the combustion zone plus the position of shock waves in the engine inlet for supersonic and hypersonic applications may be determined. The system also may include sensors having the ability to measure the temperature of various flight control surfaces using optical means. Other sensors not specifically discussed below may be included in the system including emerging technologies such as fiber-optic strain sensors. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that many other types of optical sensors can be incorporated into the disclosed system and architecture as they become available because of the flexibility afforded by the fiber-optic coupling of the sensor system architecture. Advantages of a fiber-optic backbone and optical sensing technology include modular upgradability, electromagnetic noise immunity and the measurement technology being non-invasive. The present invention also includes the architecture necessary to route measurement light to multiple locations simultaneously using standard fiber optic technology largely developed for communications applications.
The embedded flight sensor architecture can in certain embodiments make use of combustion sensing technology that is the subject of commonly owned existing patents and applications. In particular, International Patent Application Serial Number PCT/US2004/010048, METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR THE MONITORING AND CONTROL OF COMBUSTION, filed Mar. 31, 2004, is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
As described in detail below, the sophistication of certain sensors and measurements associated with the system 10 may be enhanced if laser light at multiple wavelengths is provided for sensing and interrogation purposes. For example, the laser 12 may include multiple subsystems which are capable of outputting laser light at various select wavelengths, shown as elements 12A-D on
The output from lasers 12A-D may be coupled to a lesser number of optical fiber outputs with multiplexer 24. The multiplexed input light may then be split and routed as needed using readily available optical components such as the splitter 26. Multiplexed light may be carried from the foregoing components over a series of optical fibers such as the optical fiber 28 shown on
In the schematic representation of
The output for each of the various optical fiber coupled detectors shown schematically on
A non-exclusive family of various types of laser based sensors is shown on
Representative Optical Sensor Configurations
The FBG optical temperature sensors 14 may be operatively disposed at critical locations on the skin of an aircraft or otherwise associated with an airframe. Each fiber Bragg grating 14 can sense a temperature range of only about 80-100 C. For hypersonic applications, a much wider range of skin temperatures is encountered; therefore, a method of serially combining FBGs to sense a broad temperature range must be employed. In one aspect of the present invention, multiple FBGs are positioned at each location with each FBG written to reflect in the same wavelength range but over a different temperature range of approximately 100 C. In order to identify which FBG 14 is reflecting and therefore determine the temperature, at least two different methods can be used. First, each FBG 14 could be written to exhibit a slightly different spectral width associated with its reflectance, for example, the width of the reflectance peak can be varied in order to identify which grating is reflecting. This method of preparing FBGs for various temperature ranges works because the gratings consist of refractive index variations written into glass fiber. Glass has an intrinsically high temperature damage threshold and is therefore ideal for measuring the high temperatures experienced by hypersonic aircraft. As shown in
An alternative method of determining which grating is reflecting and therefore determining temperature includes providing a significant amount of excess fiber (approximately 100 meters) coiled or otherwise routed between gratings. The laser 12 can be pulsed and the total time delay between sending the pulse and its return (time domain reflectometry) can be used to calculate the position of the grating that is reflecting and therefore indicating the temperature range.
The velocity of the airstream in the engine inlet is a critical quantity for understanding engine dynamics and is very difficult to measure accurately, particularly for supersonic and hypersonic flight. One aspect of the present invention relies upon the Doppler shift of an O2 molecule to make this measurement. For example, frequency modulated tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy (FM-TDLAS) of the O2 transition in the 760-770 nm range may be utilized to measure airflow velocity. As shown in the schematic diagram of
760 nm laser light provided from the system laser 12 and optically coupled to other sensors and detectors may also be used to measure inlet oxygen concentration and temperature. These types of measurements may be accomplished by scanning several peaks in the oxygen spectrum using the scanned absorption technique described above. Quantification of temperature and O2 concentration then proceeds using known TDLAS techniques. Generally, TDLAS is performed by the transmission of laser light through a target environment, followed by the detection of the absorption of the laser light at specific wavelengths, due to target gases such as oxygen in the inlet or water in the combustion zone. Spectral analysis of the detected light allows identification of the quantity or temperature of the target gas along the laser path. Effective sensing of temperature or component gasses requires the performance of TDLAS with multiple frequencies of laser light. The frequencies selected must match the absorption lines of a single target gas being monitored. For example, it is useful to monitor oxygen for both the mass calculations described below and to determine temperature in the relatively cool inlet. Water provides a better signal for measurements of temperature in the combustion zone. As described above, wavelength or frequency modulating the laser can be utilized to achieve higher signal to noise ratios. For example, wavelength modulation at approximately 1 MHz combined with lock-in detection techniques can increase the signal to noise ratio. Other modulation rates may be equally suitable.
The fiber coupled architecture described herein may also be used to determine a shock front position.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that other fiber-coupled diagnostics are feasible including monitoring passive emission for the combustion zone and observing black body emission from friction heated surfaces to monitor skin temperature.
The objects of the invention have been fully realized through the embodiments disclosed herein. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the various aspects of the invention may be achieved through different embodiments without departing from the essential function of the invention. The particular embodiments are illustrative and not meant to limit the scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2006/060931 | 11/15/2006 | WO | 00 | 5/12/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60737453 | Nov 2005 | US |