HK1109761B - Systems and methods for cargo compartment air conditioning using recirculated air - Google Patents
Systems and methods for cargo compartment air conditioning using recirculated air Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- HK1109761B HK1109761B HK08100431.9A HK08100431A HK1109761B HK 1109761 B HK1109761 B HK 1109761B HK 08100431 A HK08100431 A HK 08100431A HK 1109761 B HK1109761 B HK 1109761B
- Authority
- HK
- Hong Kong
- Prior art keywords
- air
- compartment
- temperature
- aircraft
- recirculation
- Prior art date
Links
Description
This invention relates generally to environmental control systems in aircraft, and more particularly, to systems and methods for providing conditioned air to a selected portion of an aircraft cabin.
Modem passenger transport aircraft typically operate at elevated altitudes in order to avoid weather and to obtain other significant advantages generally associated with high altitude flight. Accordingly, such aircraft are equipped with an environmental control system that provides pressurized and temperature controlled air to passengers within a cabin of the aircraft. Briefly and in general terms, the environmental control system typically extracts air at an elevated temperature and pressure from a compressor sec tion of one or more of the engines of the aircraft, suitably conditions the extracted air and distributes the conditioned air to the cabin to provide a comfortable environment for the flight crew and passengers within the aircraft.
The suitably conditioned air is continuously supplied to various portions of the aircraft cabin through an air distribution system. Typically, the aircraft cabin includes a flight deck area that is occupied by a flight crew, a passenger compartment that is occupied by the passengers, and one or more cargo compartments that are occupied by cargo items, such as passenger luggage, freight items, or other like items. In general, the environmental control system provides air to the various portions of the aircraft cabin according to a predetermined air distribution plan. For example, the flight deck area may be provided with substantially outside air, while the passenger compartment receives a reduced volume of outside air that is mixed with recirculated and filtered air previously within the passenger compartment so that the resulting air mixture includes both outside air and highly filtered air portions. Typically, the mixture in the passenger cabin is continuously maintained at approximately about one-half outside air by volume. The cargo compartment receives air from various sources that may include outside air, or recirculated air. In some cases, the cargo compartment is not ventilated, so that it does not receive air. In any case, a selected volume of the air within the cargo compartment is released to the lower lobe cheek region and discharged from the aircraft through an outflow valve that is controllable by the environmental control system and/or discharged through other means, such as through cabin and/or cargo door leakage.
The air temperature within the flight deck and the passenger compartment are generally closely regulated to achieve a desired comfort level to the flight crew and the passengers. Accordingly, the flight deck and the passenger compartment generally include various temperature sensing devices positioned in flight deck and passenger compartments that are operable to control the system to admit additional cold air when additional cooling is desired, and to correspondingly add additional higher temperature air when additional heating is desired.
The air temperature within the cargo compartment is generally controllable within wider temperature ranges so that the cargo compartment may accommodate a variety of different cargo items. For example, when perishable cargo is contained within the cargo compartment, lower air temperatures are generally preferred, while somewhat warmer air temperatures are preferred when live cargo is transported within the cargo compartment.
One shortcoming associated with current environmental control systems is that they may provide only for the addition of heat into the cargo compartment by continuously moving air into the cargo compartment, or from the lower lobe cheek into the compartment. Alternately, air within the compartment may be moved through one or more electrical resistance heaters to provide additional heat to the cargo compartment. In still another method, hot outside air from the compressor section of one or more of the engines may be introduced into the compartment. Accordingly, removing heat from cargo compartment air is achievable only by passive means (e.g., by conducting heat through an outer skin of the aircraft). In order to attain better temperature control, conditioned air may be supplied to the cargo compartment from the cabin and/or flight deck supply systems. Since this approach generally increases the outside air requirement, fuel consumption is disadvantageously increased.
What is needed in the art is an environmental control system that permits air temperatures within a selected compartment, such as a cargo compartment, to be controlled in a manner that is energy efficient, avoids the addition of weight to the aircraft and that minimizes the outside air requirement.
The present invention comprises a system and method for providing conditioned air to a selected portion of an aircraft cabin. The invention is defined in the independent claims. Preferred or optional features are set out in the dependent claims thereto. In one aspect, a cargo compartment recirculation system for an aircraft includes an air moving device fluidly coupled to the cargo compartment and operable to move an air volume, and an air heating device and an air cooling device fluidly coupled to the compartment. A recirculation duct is fluidly coupled to the air moving device and configured to selectively direct at least a portion of the volume to the air heater and the air cooler. A temperature control system is operably coupled to the air heating device and the air cooling device, the system being configured to control both the air heating device and the air cooling device so as to maintain a predetermined air temperature within the compartment, in response to a sensed compartment temperature.
In another aspect, a method for controlling an air temperature in an aircraft cargo compartment includes admitting a volume of air from a source, receiving into the cargo compartment a volume of air from an air recirculation system coupled to the cargo compartment, and measuring a temperature within the compartment air volume and comparing the measured temperature to a pre-selected set point temperature to generate an error value. The error value is compared to a predetermined error criterion, and the temperature of the cargo compartment is altered based upon the comparison by heating or cooling the air in the air recirculation system.
Preferred and alternate embodiments of the present invention are described in detail below with reference to the following drawings.
The present invention relates to systems and methods for providing conditioned air to a selected portion of an aircraft cabin, such as a cargo compartment. Many specific details of certain embodiments of the invention are set forth in the following description and in FIGURES 1 through 4 to provide a thorough understanding of such embodiments. One skilled in the art, however, will understand that the present invention may have additional embodiments, or that the present invention may be practiced without several of the details described in the following description.
Still referring to FIGURE 1 , the aircraft cabin 16 may be subdivided into a plurality of discrete temperature zones, such as a flight deck and a passenger compartment. Temperature sensors (also not shown in FIGURE 1 ) may be positioned in the flight deck and the passenger compartment that communicate with the A/C pack system in order to provide a closed feedback control loop. The cabin 16 is fluidly coupled to a recirculation system 28 that is operable to remove air at a predetermined rate and to subject the removed air to a highly effective air filtration process. The filtered air is then returned to the cabin 16 and combined with a predetermined volume of outside air obtained from the A/C pack system 14. The aircraft cabin 16 is fluidly coupled to a lower lobe cheek region 18 and a cargo compartment 24. The compartment 24 may be a single compartment, or further subdivided into two or more mutually isolated compartments that are generally configured to receive passenger luggage, or other cargo items. The cargo compartment 24 receives air discharged from the cabin 16, and the lower lobe cheek region 18. One or more cabin outflow valves 26 in fluid communication with the cargo compartment 24 selectively release air from the compartment 24 in order to offset the air supplied to the cargo compartment 24 to ensure that cargo compartment odors do not migrate into the cabin or into the recirculation system. Accordingly, the rate of release is generally greater than the rate of supply.
The system 10 also includes a cargo temperature control system 22 that is operable to control a temperature in the cargo compartment 24 by selectively heating and/or cooling the cargo compartment air. Accordingly, the air may be selectively routed to a heat source and cooling sink 23. The air thus routed may be heated by various methods, including heating the air with electrical resistance heaters, by admitting an amount of relatively high temperature air from the outside air system 12 ("trim air"), or by routing the removed air through one side of a heat exchanger, and routing a higher temperature fluid through an opposing side of the heat exchanger. In one embodiment, the higher temperature fluid is a relatively high temperature liquid obtained from an equipment cooling system. Alternately, when it is desired to cool the cargo supply air, the air may be selectively routed to a cooling portion of the system 23. Accordingly, the air may be routed through one side of a heat exchanger, while an opposing side of the heat exchanger receives a relatively low temperature fluid such as low temperature air obtained from an expansion stage of the air cycle machine, or from a dedicated liquid coolant loop (or refrigeration loop) that is operable to receive heat from the removed air in the heat exchanger and that rejects the heat to a relatively low temperature sink, such as the low temperature air stream external to the aircraft. In another specific embodiment, the dedicated coolant loop is a refrigeration cycle that uses a known refrigerant fluid.
The cargo compartment temperature control system 22 also includes a temperature control system that is operable to controllably adjust the temperature in the cargo compartment 24 by measuring a temperature in the compartment 24 and comparing the measured temperature to a set point value that reflects a desired temperature for the compartment 24. The temperature control system controllably adjusts the temperature by controlling valves that selectively route the removed air to the heating and cooling portions of the system 22. Control is thus achieved through a combination of control of a heat sink and/or source and control of cargo recirculation and the supply upstream of the air inlet valve 52.
The cargo compartment recirculation system 30 also includes an inlet valve 52 that is coupled to the temperature control system 40 and configured to receive air from the cheek region 42, or other aircraft systems, such as the A/C pack system 14 (FIGURE 1 ), the E/E cooling system 14 (FIGURE 1 ) or other systems. In a particular embodiment, the inlet valve 52 is configured to admit air that is discharged from an electrical/electronics (E/E) compartment in the aircraft. The air discharged from the (E/E) compartment is accordingly heated by the equipment positioned in the compartment, which may be advantageously used to provide additional heating to the cargo compartment 24 when required. Alternately, when the additional heating is not desired, the inlet valve 52 may be positioned at least partially in a closed position so that inlet air supplied to the valve 52 may be discharged into the cheek region 42 through a discharge duct 54, rather than into the compartment 24.
The temperature control system 40 is further coupled to one or more thermal sensors 56 that are operable to sense an air temperature within the cargo compartment 24. Accordingly, the sensors 56 may comprise any known temperature sensing device, such as a thermocouple, a thermopile, a thermistor, or other suitable temperature sensing devices. The temperature control system 40 thus measures an air temperature and compares the air temperature to a desired set point temperature that is provided to the system 40 by a flight crewmember, or otherwise provided to the system 40 by others. The system 40 thus generates an error signal that is proportional to a difference between the measured air temperature within the cargo compartment 24 and the set point temperature, and controls the operation of the air heater 46, the air cooler 48, and the position of the recirculation valve 36, the discharge valve 38, and the inlet valve 52 to minimize a magnitude of the error signal. The temperature control system 40 may thus employ a proportional control algorithm. Alternately, in other embodiments, the temperature control system 40 may employ a proportional-integral (P-I), or a proportional-integral-differential (P-I-D) control algorithm.
Those skilled in the art will also readily recognize that the foregoing embodiments may be incorporated into a wide variety of different systems. Referring now in particular to FIGURE 4 , a side elevation view of an aircraft 300 having one or more of the disclosed embodiments of the present invention is shown. With the exception of the embodiments according to the present invention, the aircraft 300 includes components and subsystems generally known in the pertinent art. For example, the aircraft 300 generally includes one or more propulsion units 302 that are coupled to wing assemblies 304, or alternately, to a fuselage 306 or even other portions of the aircraft 300. Additionally, the aircraft 300 also includes a tail assembly 308 and a landing assembly 310 coupled to the fuselage 306. The aircraft 300 further includes a flight control system 312 (not shown in FIGURE 4 ), as well as a plurality of other electrical, mechanical and electromechanical systems that cooperatively perform a variety of tasks necessary for the operation of the aircraft 300. Accordingly, the aircraft 300 is generally representative of a commercial passenger aircraft, which may include, for example, the 737, 747, 757, 767 and 777 commercial passenger aircraft available from The Boeing Company of Chicago, IL. Although the aircraft 300 shown in FIGURE 4 generally shows a commercial passenger aircraft, it is understood that the various embodiments of the present invention may also be incorporated into flight vehicles of other types. Examples of such flight vehicles may include manned or even unmanned military aircraft, rotary wing aircraft, or even ballistic flight vehicles, as illustrated more fully in various descriptive volumes, such as Jane's All The World's Aircraft, available from Jane's Information Group, Ltd. of Coulsdon, Surrey, UK. In addition, various embodiments of the present invention may also be incorporated into other transportation vehicles, including passenger railroad cars of various types, passenger buses, or other similar terrestrial vehicles.
With reference still to FIGURE 4 , the aircraft 300 may include one or more of the embodiments of the environmental control system 314 according to the present invention, which may operate in association with the various systems and sub-systems of the aircraft 300. The environmental control system 314 may be configured to control an air temperature within a cargo compartment of the aircraft 300, as previously discussed in detail. The system 314 may, however, be used to controllably regulate an air temperature in other selected compartments, such as a main cargo deck in a cargo aircraft, or a cargo portion of an aircraft operated in a combi configuration.
While preferred and alternate embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, as noted above, many changes can be made without departing from the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is not limited by the disclosure of these preferred and alternate embodiments. Instead, the invention should be determined entirely by reference to the claims that follow.
Claims (15)
- A cargo compartment recirculation system (30) for an aircraft, comprising:an air moving device (32) fluidly coupled to the cargo compartment (24) and operable to move a volume of air;an air heating device (46) and an air cooling device (48) fluidly coupled to the compartment;a recirculation duct (34) fluidly coupled to the air moving device and configured to selectively direct at least a portion of the volume of air to the air heating device and the air cooling device; and characterized bya temperature control system (40) operably coupled to the air heating device (46) and the air cooling device (48) that is configured to control both the air heating device and the air cooling device so as to maintain a predetermined air temperature within the compartment in response to a sensed compartment temperature.
- The system (30) of claim 1, further comprising an air distribution duct (50) that fluidly couples the air heating device (46) and the air cooling device (48) to the compartment, the distribution duct having a plurality of spaced-apart discharge locations extending through a wall of the compartment.
- The system (30) of claim 1, wherein the recirculation duct (50) further comprises a discharge duct portion (54) that is fluidly coupled to an overboard discharge location.
- The system (30) of claim 3, wherein the recirculation duct (34) further comprises an outflow valve (26) that extends through a fuselage portion of the aircraft.
- The system of claim 3, wherein the recirculation duct (34) further comprises a discharge valve (38) fluidly coupled to the discharge duct portion and the air moving device, and a recirculation valve (36) fluidly coupled to the air moving device (32) and the air heating device (46) and the air cooling device (48).
- The system of claim 1, further comprising an inlet valve (52) coupled to a conditioned air source and fluidly coupled to the air heating device (46) and the air cooling device (48), and further fluidly coupled to the recirculation duct (34).
- The system (30) of claim 6, wherein the conditioned air source comprises air discharged from an electrical/electronics (E/E) compartment (14) within the aircraft.
- The system (30) of claim 1, wherein the temperature control system (40) is coupled to at least one temperature sensor in thermal communication with the compartment.
- The system (30) of claim 1, wherein the air heating device (46) is an electrical resistance heating device, and temperature control system (40) is configured to control an electrical current supplied to the electrical resistance heating device.
- The system (30) of claim 1, wherein the air cooling device (48) includes at least one of a heat exchanger that is coupled to a fluid cooling loop, a heat sink, a cold air source and a refrigerant loop, and the temperature control system (40) is configured to control a fluid flow in the fluid cooling loop.
- A method for controlling an air temperature in an aircraft cargo compartment (24), comprising:admitting a volume of air from an air source;receiving into the aircraft cargo compartment a volume of air from an air recirculation system (30) coupled to the cargo compartment;measuring a temperature of the compartment air volume and comparing the temperature to a pre-selected set point temperature to generate an error value;comparing the error value to a predetermined error criterion; andaltering the temperature of the compartment based upon the comparison by heating or cooling the air in the air recirculation system.
- The method of claim 11, wherein comparing the error value further comprises determining if the error value is positive and greater that the error criterion, and further wherein altering the temperature of the compartment (24) further comprises activating a cooling portion of an air recirculation system (30) fluidly coupled to the cargo compartment to cool an air volume extracted from the compartment.
- The method of claim 11, wherein comparing the error value further comprises determining if the error value is negative, and further wherein altering the temperature of the compartment (24) further comprises activating a heating portion of the air recirculation system (30) fluidly coupled to the cargo compartment to heat the air volume extracted from the compartment.
- The method of claim 12, wherein activating a cooling portion further comprises coupling a fluid cooling loop to a heat exchanger that is configured to receive the extracted air volume.
- The method of claim 13, wherein activating a heating portion further comprises coupling an electrical current to a resistance heating device that is configured to receive the extracted air volume.
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US11/095,738 US8336821B2 (en) | 2005-03-31 | 2005-03-31 | Systems and methods for cargo compartment air conditioning using recirculated air |
| US11/095,738 | 2005-03-31 | ||
| PCT/US2006/011200 WO2006105049A2 (en) | 2005-03-31 | 2006-03-24 | Systems and methods for cargo compartment air conditioning using recirculated air |
Publications (3)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| HK1109761A1 HK1109761A1 (en) | 2008-06-20 |
| HK1109761B true HK1109761B (en) | 2009-12-18 |
| HK1109761C HK1109761C (en) | 2009-12-18 |
Family
ID=
Similar Documents
| Publication | Publication Date | Title |
|---|---|---|
| EP1874625B1 (en) | Systems and methods for cargo compartment air conditioning using recirculated air | |
| JP4617469B2 (en) | Apparatus and method for floor heating in aircraft | |
| US8333078B2 (en) | Method and system for controlling an aircraft air conditioning system with optimised fuel consumption | |
| US8571726B2 (en) | Method for reducing outside air inflow required for aircraft cabin air quality | |
| EP3333078B1 (en) | Air distribution system with recirculating zone trim tec | |
| KR20140031285A (en) | Air conditioning system for an aircraft passenger compartment | |
| EP2664544B1 (en) | Method for controlling an aircraft air conditioning system and aircraft air conditioning system | |
| EP2647571B1 (en) | Method for controlling an aircraft air conditioning system during maintenance | |
| US7837541B2 (en) | Method for reducing outside air inflow required for aircraft cabin air quality | |
| US9689597B2 (en) | Air-conditioning system for an aircraft, and method for an aircraft | |
| US7922118B2 (en) | System for producing process air | |
| US11518522B2 (en) | Aircraft moisture control | |
| EP1282556B1 (en) | In flight entertainment (ife) cabinet cooling system | |
| JP7251975B2 (en) | Skin cooling system | |
| US20190352012A1 (en) | Aircraft ventilation system | |
| HK1109761B (en) | Systems and methods for cargo compartment air conditioning using recirculated air | |
| HK1109761C (en) | Systems and methods for cargo compartment air conditioning using recirculated air | |
| EP1155958B2 (en) | In flight entertainment cooling system (IFE) |