NASA Evaluates Sensor Technology for Future Aircraft Efficiency

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July 14, 2008

Beth Dickey
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-2087
beth.dickey-1@xxxxxxxx

Gray Creech
Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif.
661-276-2662
gray.creech@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 08-169

NASA EVALUATES SENSOR TECHNOLOGY FOR FUTURE AIRCRAFT EFFICIENCY

EDWARDS, Calif. -- NASA is evaluating an advanced, fiber optic-based 
sensing technology that could aid development of active control of 
wing shape. Controlling a wing's shape in flight would allow it to 
take advantage of aerodynamics and improve overall aircraft 
efficiency. 

The Fiber Optic Wing Shape Sensor system measures and displays the 
shape of the aircraft's wings in flight. The system also has 
potential for improving aircraft safety when the technology is used 
to monitor the aircraft structure.

Flight tests on NASA's Ikhana, a modified Predator B unmanned aircraft 
adapted for civilian research, are under way at NASA's Dryden Flight 
Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base in California. The effort 
represents one of the first comprehensive flight validations of fiber 
optic sensor technology.

"Generations of aircraft and spacecraft could benefit from work with 
the new sensors if the sensors perform in the sky as they have in the 
laboratory," said Lance Richards, Dryden's Advanced Structures and 
Measurement group lead.

The weight reduction that fiber optic sensors would make possible 
could reduce operating costs and improve fuel efficiency. The 
development also opens up new opportunities and applications that 
would not be achievable with conventional technology. For example, 
the new sensors could enable adaptive wing-shape control.

"Active wing-shape control represents the gleam in the eye of every 
aerodynamicist," Richards said. "If the shape of the wing can be 
changed in flight, then the efficiency and performance of the 
aircraft can be improved, from takeoff and landing to cruising and 
maneuvering."

Six hair-like fibers located on the top surface of Ikhana's wings 
provide more than 2,000 strain measurements in real time. With a 
combined weight of less than two pounds, the fibers are so small that 
they have no significant effects on aerodynamics. The sensors 
eventually could be embedded within composite wings in future 
aircraft.

To validate the new sensors' accuracy, the research team is comparing 
results obtained with the fiber optic wing shape sensors against 
those of 16 traditional strain gauges co-located on the wing 
alongside the new sensors. 

"The sensors on Ikhana are imperceptibly small because they're located 
on fibers approximately the diameter of a human hair," Richards 
explained. "You can get the information you need from the thousands 
of sensors on a few fibers without the weight and complexity of 
conventional sensors. Strain gauges, for example, require three 
copper lead wires for every sensor."

When using the fiber optic sensors, researchers do not require 
analytical models for determining strain and other measurements on 
the aircraft because data derived with the sensors include all of the 
actual measurements being sought.

Another safety-related benefit of the lightweight fiber optic sensors 
is that thousands of sensors can be left on the aircraft during its 
lifetime, gathering data on structural health and performance. By 
knowing the stress levels at thousands of locations on the aircraft, 
designers can more optimally design structures and reduce weight 
while maintaining safety, Richards explained. The net result could be 
a reduction in fuel costs and an increase in range.

Further, intelligent flight control software technology now being 
developed can incorporate structural monitoring data from the fiber 
optic sensors to compensate for stresses on the airframe, helping 
prevent situations that might otherwise result in a loss of flight 
control. 

By extension, the application of the technology to wind turbines could 
improve their performance by making their blades more efficient.

"An improvement of only a few percent equals a huge economic benefit," 
Richards said. "The sensors could also be used to look at the stress 
of structures, like bridges and dams, and possibilities extend to 
potential biomedical uses as well. The applications of this 
technology are mind-boggling." 

NASA's Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate is supporting 
algorithm and systems development, instrument and ground test 
validation of the new sensor system. For more information on NASA's 
aeronautics research, visit:

http://www.aeronautics.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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