171-180 of 196 results
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Fabrication of Copper Lithium-ion Battery Case with Integrated Cooling Channels Using Binder Jetting Additive Manufacturing
PI Yue Zhou
CO-I Wenhao Zhang
CO-I Heer Patel
CO-I Henil Patel
CO-I Sirish Namilae
This project leveraged binder jetting processes to directly fabricate metallic battery cases integrated with various cooling channels, paving the way for the additive fabrication of metallic thermal management devices applied in the aerospace field.
Findings: Developed heat transfer model for the geometrical design of cooling channels, created files for experimental design and optimized printing & sintering settings, created scale-down prototypes for battery cases with integrated cooling channels.
Scholarly products: Abstract submitted to SciTech, preparing article for publication. Preparing grant application.
Categories: Faculty-Staff
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UAS Ground Collision Severity Evaluation
PI Feng Zhu
CO-I Eduardo Divo
CO-I Victor Huayamave
Increased use of UAS requires an in-depth understanding of the hazard severity and likelihood of UAS operations in the NAS. Due to their distinct characteristics (e.g. size, weight and shape) with manned aircraft systems, UAS operations may pose unique hazards to other aircraft and people on the ground.
Up to date, the studies on the UAS ground collision are still very much limited, particularly the scenario of impact between UAS and human body on the ground. Therefore, it is necessary to determine lethality thresholds for UAS using characteristic factors that affect the potential lethality of UAS in collisions with other objects, particularly human body on the ground. The objectives of this study are (1) to analyze the response and failure behavior of several typical UASs impact with human body on the ground; and (2) establish the damage threshold of UAS and its correlation with the key parameters in the crash accidents (e.g. shape, size and materials of UAS; impact energy and impulse etc.). To achieve this goal, advanced computational modeling techniques (e.g. finite element method/FEM) will be used to simulate the typical UAS/people impact scenarios.Based on the results, a design guidance can be further suggested to improve the crashworthiness of UAS and safety of personnel on the ground.
Conventional 14 CFR system safety analyses include hazards to flight crew and occupants may not be applicable to unmanned aircraft. It is necessary to determine the dedicated hazard severity thresholds for UAS and identify the key factors that affect the potential severity of UAS in collisions with other aircraft on the ground or in airborne encounters as well as collisions with people on the ground. These severity thresholds will help determine acceptable corresponding system failure levels in accordance with the applicable 14 CFR requirements (for example 14 CFR 23.1309 and 14 CFR 25.1309).
Categories: Faculty-Staff
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Media Literacy and Online Critical Thinking Initiatives
PI Diane Zorri
CO-I Ann Phillips
CO-I Daniel Gressang
CO-I Matthew Sharp
CO-I Mihhail Berezovski
CO-I Rachel Silverman
CO-I Steven Master
This project proposes a train-the-trainer professional development program for Volusia county’s secondary school educators to co-opt pedagogical tools and methods that challenge online violence mobilization narratives, increase awareness of violent extremist messaging and recruiting, and increase the capabilities of targeted populations to resist and counter messaging.
Participants of Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical University’s train-the-trainer seminars will identify problematic online and media messages that could lead to radicalization to violent extremism, critically evaluate the problematic assumptions, data, or logic of those messages, and develop pedagogical strategies for teaching their own students to recognize and critically evaluate those messages. This applicant fulfills the grant program priority to achieve diversity of project type.Categories: Faculty-Staff
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Wireless Communication Testbed for Internet-of-Things Research
Research work to develop Wireless IoT Testbed at ERAU – Prescott campus. The testbed developed currently has three nodes, and is being used for Research and Teaching (EE424-Wireless Communications).
Sponsor: Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical Univ. (ERAU), Faculty Innovative Research in Science and Tech. (FIRST), grant#13462.
Budget & Role: $25,000, Principal Investigator
Categories: Faculty-Staff
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Microfluidic Chip & Magnetic 3D Bioprinting Research
Breast and colon cancer are the leading causes of death in developed countries (e.g., U.S.) and are highly associated with numerous risk factors including genetics, diet, obesity, cigarette smoking, hypertension, stress, and spaceflight stressors. Despite advances in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer, the mortality rates are still high and the potential mechanisms driving the metastatic potential of the cancer cells are still not well characterized.
Categories: Faculty-Staff
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Space Operations in the NAS: Analysis of Impacts to the Aviation Industry
The basic goal of the research is to understand impacts to aviation stakeholders of the National Airspace System (NAS) due to space launch activities. The focus of the research is to study impacts to general aviation (GA), particularly with respect to airports and airport users, near and around Cape Canaveral, FL. Further, several avenues will be assessed to determine what aspects of GA are impacted, where, when, how, and why. Data will be collected and analyzed in alternate methods other than the originally-proposed simulation and modeling. As an aside, per FAA input and following review of extant literature, impacts to GA have not been adequately researched. Until recently, the industry and the FAA have largely focused on impacts to airlines (Tinoco, Eudy, Cannon 2020). As a result, we believe this effort will lead to interesting outcomes and fill a much-needed gap in the literature.
Categories: Faculty-Staff
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Langrangian Wind Tunnel
ERAU is supporting industry (i.e. Global Aerospace Corp.) in the development of a novel hypersonic wind tunnel by using high-fidelity computational fluid dynamcs.
GAC is leading development of a wind tunnel in which the test article is propelled thru the test section at hypersonic speeds using a novel, proprietary approach. Due to proprietary restrictions a simplistic version of the test article is illustrated below as it moves Mach 10 from right to left. Shock waves may be observed reflecting off tunnel walls. A Phase I Air Force STTR effort has been completed and Phase II is expected to begin in the near future.
Categories: Faculty-Staff
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ACTIVE CONTROL OF SUPERSONIC JET NOISE VIA BI-MODAL EXCITATION
Jet noise is a major problem for both military and commercial aircraft, and there is a lot of interest in ways to reduce it. In this research project sponsored by the Office of Naval Research, the objective is to implement active control in rectangular jets to reduce the noise. This is to be done by exciting the jet at a fundamental frequency as well as either a harmonic or subharmonic frequency. The amplitudes of the excitation are small, thus there should be minimal impact of excitation on aircraft performance. In doing this, we can manipulate the large-scale structures in the jet, which is the dominant noise source. The working principle here is that energy from the fundamental mode is transferred to the subharmonic or harmonic, which results in a reduction of the peak noise.
In order to compute the noise sources, High-Fidelity Large Eddy Simulations (LES) is done by modifying a code originally developed by the Air Force Research Laboratory, which uses high-order numerical schemes. However, LES is very computationally expensive and can take weeks to obtain results when running on a supercomputer. Choosing the wrong excitation parameters can result in zero noise reduction or even enhancement of the noise. To predict optimal excitation parameters, a Reduced-Order Model (ROM) has been derived to predict the propagation of noise sources in a jet. Inputs to the ROM can come from linear methods such as Linear Stability Analysis or the Linearized Euler Equations. Once the ROM is set up, a set of nonlinear differential equations can be solved numerically. By comparison, this takes only a matter of seconds and does not require the use of a supercomputing cluster. Using these results, we can observe the damping effect on the dominant noise source, and optimal excitation parameters can be chosen as inputs into LES.
Current work is focused on performing LES on a Mach 1.5 planar jet, which approximates the flow in the minor plane of a rectangular jet. This is being done to validate open-loop control using results from the ROM. Both the symmetric and asymmetric modes will be studied. Future work will involve performing LES on a Three-dimensional rectangular jet, which will be more representative of a real jet. Here, closed-loop control can also be implemented. By measuring the noise signal near the exit of the jet, parameters can be inputted to the ROM to give optimal excitation parameters thereby maximizing the noise reduction.
Categories: Faculty-Staff
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PI of the project Coalition for Undergraduate Comp, Science & Eng. Education (TUES 1244967) 2014-2016,
The project creates a cluster of collaborating institutions that combine students into common Computational Sciences and Engineering (CSE) classes and uses cyberlearning technologies to deliver instruction. Students also conduct projects that begin in a summer workshop in Embry‑Riddle's Nonlinear Wave Lab and complete them at their home institution using remote lab access. Because few small colleges have the resources to provide undergraduate CSE courses, the project significantly increases student participation in computational science. The project intends to scale-up by establishing a network of clusters. The project advances the learning of CSE by using an R&D process to provide a coherent framework for designing instruction and assessing learning in which the instructional and assessment methods are aligned with a common idea: Model-based learning and reasoning. In addition, the educational infrastructure is improved by establishing a state of the art cyberlearning network that includes a virtual conferencing system; video communication between multiple endpoints such as PCs & iPads; automatic recording and archiving of sessions; and remote lab access in which all operations and measurements in the Nonlinear Wave Lab are remotely operational and streamed online.
Categories: Faculty-Staff
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NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS OF SYNTHETIC JET ACTUATOR-BASED ICE PROTECTION SYSTEMS
The project investigates numerically a novel approach to efficient icing control using an array of thermally activated synthetic jet actuators (SJAs) embedded in an aircraft surface exposed to ice accretion due to supercooled subsonic upstream flow. General aspects of the unsteady active flow control (AFC) using synthetic-jet actuation are first addressed, including integrating multiple design and analysis tools to account for various geometry and unsteady flow parameters. A numerically efficient approach is developed to allow for the natural interaction of the generated synthetic jet with the external flow without the need to model the entire actuator dynamics. The effects of SJA actuation with and without jet heating on ice accretion are next examined for a benchmark test case of the flow over a wedge. The parametric study investigates the effects of droplet distribution, SJA chamber temperature, droplet size, and freestream temperature. It is shown that the use of heated actuating SJAs may lead to complete prevention or a significant reduction in the ice accreted on the wedge surface.Categories: Faculty-Staff
171-180 of 196 results