Preps
Continue for Launching Engine Icing Research
NASA Aeronautics Research Mission
Directorate
NASA scientists are making progress in
their preparations to mount a detailed research campaign aimed at solving a
modern-day aviation mystery involving the unlikely combination of fire and ice
inside a running jet engine.
The investigation deals with the
seemingly strange notion that ice crystals associated with warm-weather storms
can be ingested into the core of a jet engine, melt and then re-freeze,
potentially causing the engine to lose power or shut down altogether. Safety
officials have documented more than 150 incidents of this phenomenon since
1988. Most of the incidents have occurred in the tropics.
“It doesn’t seem intuitive that ice can
form in the core of a warm engine,” said Ron Colantonio, manager of the
Atmospheric Environment Safety Technologies Project at NASA’s Glenn Research
Center in Cleveland.
So in order to make sense of the
mystery, NASA and its research partners are planning to gather information by
flying a specially-outfitted business jet in high-altitude, warm-weather
conditions suspected of having a large amount of ice crystals.
Technicians in California are currently
modifying a Gulfstream G2 airplane to hold a suite of meteorological
instruments, with hopes of having everything ready for initial trial runs of
the full setup in Florida this August.
The research team then will take the
lessons learned from their trial runs, make appropriate changes and prepare for
the primary campaign, which is now targeted between January and March, 2013.
These flights will take place over Darwin, Australia, an area known for having
the type of storms that include high levels of ice crystals.
Meanwhile, another set of investigators
will be preparing the ground segment of the research, which involves simulating
the engine icing conditions in an engine test facility at Glenn, as well as
refining new computer codes to help predict where and when the engine icing
conditions exist.
For now, pilots are being trained to
recognize the potential existence of these ice crystals, which are about the
same size as baking soda, and advised to avoid the weather conditions as best
they can. Although a potential hazard, no accident has been attributed to the
phenomenon in the 23 years since it was identified.
In most of the known cases, pilots have
managed to restore engine power and reach their destinations without further
problems. According to the Federal Aviation Administration, there have been two
forced landings.
For example, in 2005, both engines of a
Beechcraft business jet failed at 38,000 feet above Jacksonville, Fla. The
pilot safely glided the aircraft to an airport, dodging thunderstorms and
ominous clouds on the way down.
It is expected that updated flight
safety rules and engine testing standards will be adopted once all the research
is compiled and analyzed during the next few years.
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