Thermal management a challenge for designers of future military aircraft

March 13, 2008
SAN DIEGO, 12 March 2008. Jim Robles from The Boeing Company gave an early afternoon talk--"Aerospace Thermal Management Challenges and Solutions, A Boeing Perspective"--during the Military & Aerospace Electronics Forum.

By Courtney E. Howard

SAN DIEGO, 12 March 2008. Jim Robles from The Boeing Company gave an early afternoon talk--"Aerospace Thermal Management Challenges and Solutions, A Boeing Perspective"--during the Military & Aerospace Electronics Forum.

In a presentation on how thermal management looks to The Boeing Company, "It's everywhere we look," Robles says. "Thermal management is quickly becoming a limiting design factor for future military aircraft and satellites."

Today's aviation, vetronics, and other applications in mil-aero require more power, but have less space—this contributes to higher thermal loads and less opportunity to drive the heat out, Robles describes.

Boeing customers care about the following, according to Robles: Total ownership cost, high functional density, reliability in harsh environments, compatibility with two-level maintenance, and the ability to facilitate insertion of new technology and mitigation of component obsolescence.

Robles went on to discuss thermal-management options available to the mil-aero industry—such as conduction cooling and liquid flow-through cooling—as well as presented specifics about VITA circuit cards, ANSI/VITA documents, and other thermal-management information.

Interest in and use of directed energy weapons and electric aircraft are growing, and these innovations require ultra-efficient energy systems. An industry need exists, Robles says, for "energy system technologies that provide dramatic improvements in capability and affordability."

Some technologies that Boeing is investigating are lightweight carbon thermal-management systems, as well as fuel cells, CNT thermal interface, and spray cooling. "We are not going to have any other choice than to investigate and invest in spray cooling," he predicts.

The aerospace thermal management challenge is driven by: more electric aircraft, directed energy weapons, and increased power and heat flux in avionics and vetronics. At the same time, mil-aero users in the future are always going to be interested in ramping it up–doing things faster, at greater distances, and so on. "Future cooling demands will require an integrated thermal management strategy at the platform, subsystem, and component levels."

"COTS in the future," Robles proclaims, "That's the way our lives are going to be."

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