Detail publikace

Engine condition monitoring on small single engine turboprop

ŠPLÍCHAL, M. ČERVENKA, M. JURAČKA, J.

Originální název

Engine condition monitoring on small single engine turboprop

Typ

článek v časopise ve Web of Science, Jimp

Jazyk

angličtina

Originální abstrakt

PurposeThis study aims to focus on verifying the possibility of monitoring the condition of a turboprop engine using data recorded by on-board avionics Garmin G1000. This approach has potential benefits for operators without the need to invest in specialised equipment. The main focus was on the inter-turbine temperature (ITT). An unexpected increase in temperature above the usual value may indicate an issue with the engine. The problem lies in the detection of small deviations when the absolute value of the ITT is affected by several external variables. Design/methodology/approachThe ITT is monitored by engine sensors and stored by avionics 1x per second onto an SD card. This process generates large amount of data that needs to be processed. Therefore, an algorithm was created to detect the steady states of the engine parameters. The ITT value also depends on the flight parameters and surrounding environment. As a solution to these effects, the division of data into clusters that represent the usual flight profiles was tested. This ensures a comparison at comparable ambient pressures. The dominant environmental influence then remain at the ambient air temperature (OAT). Three OAT compensation methods were tested in this study. Compensation for the standard atmosphere, compensation for the standard temperature of the given flight level and compensation for the speed of the generator, where the regression analysis proved the dependence between the ambient temperature and the speed of the generator. FindingsThe influence of ambient temperature on the corrected ITT values is noticeable. The best method for correcting the OAT appears to be the use of compensation through the revolutions of the compressor turbine NG. The speed of the generator depends on several parameters, and can refine the corrected ITT value. During the long-term follow-up, the ITT differences (delta values) were within the expected range. The tested data did not include the behaviour of the engine with a malfunction or other damage that would clearly verify this approach. Therefore, the engine monitoring will continue. Practical implicationsThis study presents a possible approach to turbine engine condition monitoring using limited on board avionic data. These findings can support the development of an engine condition monitoring system with automatic abnormality detection and low operating costs. Originality/valueThis article represent a practical description of problems in monitoring the condition of a turboprop engine in an aircraft with variable flight profiles. The authors are not aware of a similar method that uses monitoring of engine parameters at defined flight levels. Described findings should limit the influence of ambient air pressure on engine parameters.

Klíčová slova

Turboprop engine; Trend monitoring; Engine health monitoring; Inter-turbine temperature

Autoři

ŠPLÍCHAL, M.; ČERVENKA, M.; JURAČKA, J.

Vydáno

2. 5. 2023

Nakladatel

Emerald

Místo

BINGLEY

ISSN

1748-8842

Periodikum

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology - An International Journal

Ročník

2023

Číslo

05

Stát

Spojené království Velké Británie a Severního Irska

Strany počet

9

URL

Plný text v Digitální knihovně

BibTex

@article{BUT183589,
  author="Miroslav {Šplíchal} and Miroslav {Červenka} and Jaroslav {Juračka}",
  title="Engine condition monitoring on small single engine turboprop",
  journal="Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology - An International Journal",
  year="2023",
  volume="2023",
  number="05",
  pages="9",
  doi="10.1108/AEAT-09-2022-0249",
  issn="1748-8842",
  url="https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/AEAT-09-2022-0249/full/html"
}