The present invention relates to a method and a system for detecting the operation conditions of equipments of an aircraft, in particular to a method and a system for detecting the performance of a crew oxygen system.
A modern aircraft generally flies at a height between 7000-15000 meters. At such height, the oxygen content in the air is very low and the oxygen partial pressure always is only about 10 kpa (kilopascals), which is not sufficient to maintain normal breath. Generally, air is pressurized and then pressed into a cabin by an engine to provide oxygen. However, in special conditions, such as loss of cabin pressure and like, the aircraft must provide additional oxygen to crew members and passengers for breathing.
In an aircraft, there are two independent oxygen systems, i.e., a crew oxygen system and a passenger oxygen system. The crew oxygen system uses hyperbaric oxygen stored in an oxygen cylinder in the aircraft. The hyperbaric oxygen is decompressed and diluted, and then is specially provided to crew members in the control cabin. The passenger oxygen system provides oxygen, which is obtained through chemical reaction, to passengers and crew members in the passenger cabin.
The crew oxygen system is very important to ensure safety of flight of the aircraft. In the conventional method for detecting performance of crew oxygen system, the pressure of the crew oxygen system is recorded through artificial way, and the oxygen cylinder is replaced when the pressure of the crew oxygen system is lower than a certain threshold. Or the aircraft system is configured to give an alarm to indicate the oxygen cylinder needs to be replaced, when the pressure of the crew oxygen system is lower than a certain threshold.
However, all of the above methods can increase the costs of operation for airlines. The more important thing is, if there is only slight leakage existing in the crew oxygen system, all of the above methods cannot help recognize the leakage in time and thus the problem cannot be eliminated in time. Under this situation, the troubleshooting and maintenance of the crew oxygen system always are post-processing, so that the safety of flight cannot be guaranteed. Moreover, the troubleshooting of the leakage of the crew oxygen system is a time-consuming process, which can cause airline delays even grounding.
For one or more technical problem of the conventional technology, one aspect of the invention provides a method for detecting the performance of a crew oxygen system, comprising: obtaining an oxygen pressure in an oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, an ambient air temperature and a cockpit temperature; generating crew oxygen messages from the obtained oxygen pressure in the oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature; receiving the crew oxygen messages, and determining an oxygen pressure in the oxygen cylinder under standard temperature; and determining performance of the crew oxygen system.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a method for generating crew oxygen messages, comprising: obtaining an oxygen pressure in an oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, an ambient air temperature and a cockpit temperature; generating crew oxygen messages from the obtained oxygen pressure in the oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a system for detecting the performance of a crew oxygen system, comprising: a crew oxygen pressure data obtaining device; a crew oxygen messages generating device configured to generate crew oxygen messages according to an oxygen pressure in a oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system obtained by the crew oxygen pressure data obtaining device, an ambient air temperature and a cockpit temperature, and the crew oxygen messages are transmitted through a crew oxygen messages transmitting device; and a crew oxygen pressure data processing device configured to receive the crew oxygen messages, determine an oxygen pressure of the oxygen cylinder under standard temperature, and determine performance of the crew oxygen system accordingly.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a system for detecting the performance of a crew oxygen system, comprising: a pressure sensor configured to measure an oxygen pressure of an oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system; a DMU of AIDS of ACMS or a part thereof configured to obtain an oxygen pressure of an oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, an ambient air temperature and a cockpit temperature, generating crew oxygen messages, wherein, the crew oxygen messages are transmitted through the ACARS; a server configured to receive the crew oxygen messages from the ACARS, determine an oxygen pressure of the oxygen cylinder under standard temperature, and determine performance of the crew oxygen system accordingly.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a method for maintenance of a crew oxygen system, comprising ; obtaining an oxygen pressure of an oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, an ambient air temperature and a cockpit temperature; generating crew oxygen messages from obtained oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature; receiving the crew oxygen messages, and determining an oxygen pressure of the oxygen cylinder under standard temperature; and arranging maintenance for the crew oxygen system in respond to degradation of the crew oxygen system.
Hereinafter, some preferred embodiments of the invention will be described in reference to the accompanying drawings.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, the decompression regulator or the decompression splitter is provided with a pressure sensor, such as a pressure sensor 230, for measuring the oxygen pressure in the oxygen cylinder. According to one embodiment of the present invention, the pressure sensor 230 can be installed on one branch of the splitter 210 or one branch of the oxygen cylinder. In a word, the pressure sensor 230 can be installed in any position of the hyperbaric section to measure the oxygen pressure in the oxygen cylinder.
The crew oxygen pressure data acquisition device 401 is configured to obtain the oxygen pressure data in the oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system. The aircraft crew oxygen system and the pressure sensor thereof in the embodiments shown in
As the aircraft system is more and more complex, the aircraft data system has been greatly developed. For example, the ACMS of Airbus and AHM of Boeing. In addition, the centralized fault display system (CFDS) also has been greatly developed. Such systems have a characteristic, i.e., they can automatically generate messages including specific data according to data monitored in real time when specific trigger condition is satisfied. The crew oxygen message generating device 402 in the embodiment can be such system or a part of such system.
Taking the ACMS of Airbus as an example (the AHM of Boeing can be comparable with the ACMS of Airbus), the ACMS includes an aircraft integrated data system (AIDS). The core of the AIDS is a data management unit (DMU). The DMU has the following two important functions:
According to one embodiment of the present invention, the crew oxygen message generating device 402 is the DMU or a part of the DMU. The crew oxygen message generating device 402 obtains the oxygen pressure data in the oxygen cylinder from the crew oxygen pressure data acquisition device 401.
Since the oxygen pressure in the oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system is related to the temperature, the oxygen pressure and the temperature in the oxygen cylinder must be obtained simultaneously. However, a temperature sensor generally is not provided in the oxygen system. Therefore, the temperature in the oxygen cylinder need to be calculated based on other temperature which can be measured. According to one embodiment of the present invention, a temperature sensor for measuring the oxygen temperature can be provided into the crew oxygen system.
In consideration of the position of the oxygen cylinder in the crew oxygen system, according to one embodiment of the present invention, the following formula can be used to obtain the oxygen temperature in the oxygen cylinder:
where, Tat is the ambient air temperature or the temperature outside the airplane, Tc is the cockpit temperature, k1 and k2 are adjustment parameters and k1+k2=2. According to one embodiment of the present invention, k1>k2. That is, the oxygen temperature T is related to the ambient air temperature Tat and the cockpit temperature Tc, and the ambient air temperature has greater influence (is more relevant). Certainly, other mean value formulas also can be used to calculate the oxygen temperature.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, k1=k2. That is, the formula (1) can be changed to:
where, k is the adjustment parameter. According to one example of the present invention, k is close to 1. Each of k, k1 and k2 can be obtained through measurement or statistical analysis.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, k=1. Then formula (2) can be changed to:
The oxygen temperature obtained based on the formula (3), which may be less precise than those calculated from the formula (1) and the formula (2), is enough for the system for detecting the performance of the crew oxygen system in this embodiments of the present invention.
As described above, the aircraft data system, such as the ACMS of Airbus or the AHM of Boeing, can automatically obtain many flight parameters. Theses parameters include the ambient air temperature Tat and the cockpit temperature Tc. When the trigger condition is satisfied, and when the oxygen pressure data in the oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system is obtained, the ambient air temperature or the temperature Tat outside the airplane and the cockpit temperature Tc at present are obtained simultaneously, so as to generate crew oxygen messages.
The crew oxygen messages are transmitted to the crew oxygen data processing device 404 through the crew oxygen message transmitting device in real time or at certain timing. According to one embodiment of the present invention, the crew oxygen message transmitting device includes an aircraft portion 403 and a ground portion 410, for performing communication from the aircraft to the ground. One example of the crew oxygen message transmitting device is an aircraft communication addressing and reporting system (ACARS). The ACARS is a digital data link system for transmitting messages (i.e., short messages) between the aircraft and the ground station through radio or a satellite, and offers services to the air-ground or ground-ground heavy data communication of the airline, so that all kinds of information can be exchanged.
The ACARS is comprised of an avionics computer called ACARS managing unit (MU), and a control display unit (CDU). The MU is used for sending and receiving VHF radio digital messages to and from the ground. On the ground, the ACARS is comprised of a network including the ground station 410 having a radio transceiver, which can receive or send messages (data link messages). These ground stations generally are owned by service providers, and distribute received messages to respective servers of different airlines on the network.
On the one hand, the ACARS can make the flying aircraft automatically provide real-time data such as flight dynamics, engine parameters and like to the ground station of the airline without crew members' intervention, meanwhile, also transmit other information to the ground station, so that the operating control center of the airline can obtain real-time, uninterrupted, and a great deal of flight data and relevant information on an application system thereof and master their own aircraft's dynamic, monitor the aircraft in real time, meet requirements of relevant departments such as a flight operations department, a operations department, a maintenance department and like. On the other hand, the ground station can provide multiple services to the flying aircraft, such as meteorological information, airway information, troubleshooting measures for air emergency fault and like, so as to enhance the guaranteed ability of safety of aircraft and the service level to passengers. In the case, i.e., normal VHF ground-air communication channel is increasingly burdened, the amount of information transmitted by it is low and speed is slow, such bi-directional data communication system can obviously improve and enhance guaranteed ability of the communication between the ground and the aircraft flying in the air.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, the crew oxygen message transmitting device also can be a communication device or system based on the Aviation Telecommunication Network (ATN).
According to one embodiment of the present invention, the crew oxygen message transmitting device also can be a solid state memory device. The crew oxygen messages are stored in the solid state memory device. The transmission of crew oxygen messages can be performed through the transmission of the solid state memory device.
The crew oxygen data processing device 404 receives crew oxygen messages from the crew oxygen message transmitting device 403. According to one embodiment of the present invention, the crew oxygen data processing device 404 can be a server of a certain airline. According to one embodiment of the present invention, the server receives crew oxygen messages from a certain aircraft through ACARS or ATN.
The crew oxygen data processing device 404 decodes messages through a device such as an ACARS message decoder so as to obtain data and store the obtained data in the server.
For improving the accuracy of the method for detecting the performance of the crew oxygen system of the present invention, more accurate oxygen pressure in the oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, ambient air temperature and cockpit temperature should be obtained, so as to generate more accurate crew oxygen messages.
The operation data of aircraft including the oxygen pressure data in the oxygen cylinder in the crew oxygen system, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature, can be measured in real time and stored in data caches. When the trigger condition, which is set to be the taking-off of the airplane, it is entirely possible to obtain relevant data of 1 minute before taking-off from data caches. According to one embodiment of the present invention, other trigger conditions, such as a timer, may be used to directly obtain data of 1 minute before taking-off, including the oxygen pressure data in the oxygen cylinder in the crew oxygen system, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, at steps 521 and 522, after the data at the time of 1 minute before taking-off is obtained, the oxygen pressure data, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature at the time of 30 seconds before taking-off are obtained, and then the oxygen pressure data, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature at the time of taking-off are obtained again. That is, three sets of data, i.e., the crew oxygen pressure data, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature at the time of 1 minute before taking-off, at the time of 30 seconds before taking-off and at the time of taking-off, are respectively obtained. The mean value or the median of the data measured 3 times serves as the data for generating the crew oxygen messages. The crew oxygen messages generated in such way are more accurate.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, crew oxygen messages can be directly generated according to the obtained oxygen pressure data, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature before taking-off (or at the time of taking-off). Proceeding to step 560 after step 522 to generate the crew oxygen messages.
The crew oxygen messages can be generated according to combination of the crew oxygen pressure data and temperature data obtained before taking-off (or at the time of taking-off) and the data obtained after landing. Or uncompleted messages can be generated when the crew oxygen pressure data and temperature data before taking-off are obtained, and then can be stored in a memory; uncompleted messages are completed when the crew oxygen pressure data and temperature data after taking-off are obtained.
As shown by the example in
According to one embodiment of the present invention, after the data, i.e., oxygen pressure data, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature at the time of 1 hour after landing are obtained, the crew oxygen pressure data, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature at the time of 1 hour and 30 seconds after landing are obtained, and then the crew oxygen pressure data, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature at the time of 1 hour and 60 seconds after landing are obtained. That is, three sets of data, i.e., the crew oxygen pressure data, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature at the time of 1 hour, at the time of 1 hour and 30 seconds and at the time of 1 hour and 60 seconds after landing, are respectively obtained. The mean value or the median of data measured 3 times serves as the data for generating the crew oxygen messages. As to steps 551 and 552, if it can be ensured that the temperature of the aircraft is identical with the ambient temperature and the effect of flight is eliminated, other time can be selected to obtain the crew oxygen pressure data and temperature data.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, if the aircraft takes off again within less than 1 hour after landing, the oxygen pressure data, the ambient air temperature and the cockpit temperature before re-taking-off (or at the time of the re-taking-off) are obtained, to replace the data at the time of 1 hour after landing. Certainly, multiple measurements and adoption of mean value or the median also can be applied.
Through the system for detecting the performance of crew oxygen described in the present invention, it is realized that the performance of the crew oxygen onboard can be automatically detected, so as to avoid cost of artificial record and potential mistakes or omittance caused by artificial record.
The detection of deterioration period has the following advantages: firstly, when the crew oxygen system enters deterioration period, the probability of failure is low. Therefore, safety of flight will be guaranteed if the aircraft is maintained at this time; secondly, when it is determined the crew oxygen system enters failure period, the airline can timely arrange maintenance for the aircraft, so as to avoid unscheduled maintenance, reduce the delay of the aircraft and the waste of cost of maintenance caused by replacement of oxygen cylinder according to time limit or during maintenance. Certainly, embodiments of the present invention also can be applied to detect the failure period.
After the oxygen temperature is obtained, the crew oxygen pressure measured under different temperatures can be transformed into the standard state pressure under the standard temperature, so as to make a comparison and calculate the leakage rate. The standard state pressure can be calculated by the following formula:
where, Ps is the standard state pressure, Ts is the standard temperature, P is the obtained oxygen pressure through measurement, T is the oxygen temperature when measuring. The standard temperature can be 20° C. Certainly, the standard temperature also can be other temperature.
As shown in
At step 860, the multiple sets of standard state pressure data at different time are analyzed, so as to determine if the performance of crew oxygen system deteriorates. Or, at step 870, the multiple sets of standard state pressure data at different time serve as one sample and then the sample is compared with another sample of another set of standard state pressure data of the same type of aircraft, so as to determine if performance of the crew oxygen system deteriorates.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, the leg leakage rate is used to determine if performance of the crew oxygen system deteriorates. The leg leakage rate of the crew oxygen system can be calculated by the following formula:
where, t1 is take-off time, t2 is landing time, Ps1 is standard state pressure of the crew oxygen system when aircraft takes-off, Ps2 is standard state pressure of the crew oxygen system after landing. Therefore, performance of the crew oxygen system can be determined according to the difference ΔPs between the standard state pressure of the crew oxygen system before taking-off and that after landing. For example, if the value of ΔPs=Ps1-Ps2 is larger than 100 PSI, it means that the performance of the crew oxygen system deteriorates.
Performance of the crew oxygen system also can be determined according to the leg leakage rate. For example, if the leg leakage rate
is larger that 48 PSI/day, it means the performance of the crew oxygen system deteriorates.
The pressure of the crew oxygen system under a certain temperature can be evaluated according to the calculated leg leakage rate. This can obviously reduce such case, i.e., unscheduled replacement of oxygen cylinder before flight caused by the fact that the aircraft temperature of the aircraft after the flight and the temperature when the engine is cold are greatly different.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, performance of the crew oxygen system can be determined through statistical relation between the oxygen standard state pressure Ps of the crew oxygen system and installation time to of oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, and through the calculation of the slope of fitting curves.
The relationship between Ps and to meet the following formula:
P
s=β1+β2*to+μ (6)
where, Ps is the standard state pressure, to is the installation time of oxygen cylinder of the crew oxygen system, β1 is an intercept term which relate s to flight time; β2 is a slope term which indicates the gas tightness of oxygen system; μis a random term which indicates uncertainty between Ps and to.
Mean value of to can be expressed as following:
where, n is the number of sampled points which are used in the calculation.
Mean value of Ps can be expressed as following:
where, n is the number of sampled points which are used in the calculation.
β2 also can be determined by the following formula according to formulas (6)-(8):
The β2 is a negative value. The smaller the value of β2 is, the worse the air tightness of crew oxygen system is. The performance of crew oxygen system can be determined through detecting change of β2, i.e., the slope term. The performance of crew oxygen system also can be determined through making a comparison between slope terms of different aircrafts.
When performing performance detection of crew oxygen system using above slope detection method, it would be better if there is no replacement of oxygen cylinder or oxygenating in the period represented by data points which are used in the calculation.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, the deterioration of the performance of the crew oxygen system can be determined through the independent sample test to leakage rate.
Since the interval of flight leg time is short, the change of system pressure may be slight, the obtained standard state pressure fluctuates greatly sometimes due to the influence by the fitting accuracy of external temperature and detection accuracy of the pressure sensor. For reducing the influence by the accuracy of external temperature and accuracy of the pressure sensor, one embodiment of the present invention does not use the leg leakage rate, but uses two points which are more than 24-hour apart to compare the pressure at those two points, that is, adopts the 24-hour interval leakage rate PL24. Certainly, other intervals also can be adopted, such as an interval which is greater than 12-hour or 36-hour. Meanwhile, for removing bad data point effect caused by sampling, PL24 may be 3 days rolling average which means the average value is calculated from all of PL24 in 3 days. The person skilled in the art can understand that 3 days is only an example, other days, such 2-4 days also can be used based on special data condition.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, the 24-hour interval 3 days rolling average leakage rate PL-avg24, which indicates performance of crew oxygen system, can be calculated by the following formula:
where, n is the number of data points in 3 days.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, when it is required to know if performance of crew oxygen system changes in a certain period, the data in that period can be selected as a set of samples; meanwhile, another set of data of a aircraft of the same type can be selected as another set of samples. It is determined if the two sets of data are significantly different, through making a comparison between respective PL-avg24 of two sets of samples, according to the statistical probability, so that the period and degree of deterioration of performance of crew oxygen system can be determined.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, respective PL-avg24 of two sets of data and variance of PL-avg24 are calculated firstly. Assume S12 is the variance of the first set of PL-avg24 (including n data), S22 is the variance of the second set of PL-avg24 (including m data). Since S12/S22 should follow F (n-1,m-1) distribution, the value of F can be determined by searching the F distribution table. It can be determined if the difference between two sets of data is significant according to the value of F. If the probability that the two sets of data belong to the same distribution is less than 2.5%, it can be determined that the difference of two sets of data is significant.
It can be determined if the difference between two sets of data is significant through other independent sample T test. If the difference is significant, it can be determined there is significant change on performance of crew oxygen system. Given it is determined there occurs significant change on performance of crew oxygen system, it is easy to determine which set of data indicates that the performance of crew oxygen system deteriorate according to the average value of leakage rate.
The independent sample test for average leakage rate either uses data at different time of the same aircraft, or uses data of a different aircraft of the same type. Therefore, this method is flexible. Moreover, this detection manner is not limited by replacement of oxygen cylinder and oxygenation, and can be used to determine if significant change occurred on performance of crew oxygen system between before and after replacement of oxygen cylinder and oxygenating.
Hereinafter, how to determine if significant change occurs to the performance of crew oxygen system using the method of the present invention is described through some embodiments.
It can be seen from
The present invention need not manual recording and can save human's labor. Moreover, the present invention can determine performance of oxygen system onboard based on standard state pressure of oxygen and oxygen leakage rate obtained from oxygen messages, and thus can perform maintenance before the oxygen system onboard enters failure period, can speed up the fault diagnosis and reduce troubleshooting time, so that service time of oxygen system onboard can be extended and operating costs of airline can be reduced, meanwhile also can make the oxygen system onboard free from passengers' safety issue caused by sudden massive leakage, and can enhance operating safety of aircraft. The invention can predict the remaining service time of the oxygen system onboard based on the leakage rate, so that the service time can be extended obviously and maintenance cost of aircraft can be reduced.
The above embodiments of the invention have been disclosed for illustrative purposes and the invention is not to be limited to the particular forms or methods disclosed. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that various modifications, additions and substitutions are possible. Therefore, the invention is to cover all modifications, equivalents and alternatives falling within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201110165219.3 | Jun 2011 | CN | national |