Optimized synthesis of cost‐effective, controllable oil system architectures for turbofan engines
Turbofan oil systems are used to provide lubrication and cooling in the engine . There is an increasing interest in oil system architectures which utilize electric pumps and/or valves to give optimized control of flows to individual oil chambers, leading to improved thermal management of oil and lub...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Systems engineering 2018-09, Vol.21 (5), p.417-431 |
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description | Turbofan oil systems are used to provide lubrication and cooling in the engine . There is an increasing interest in oil system architectures which utilize electric pumps and/or valves to give optimized control of flows to individual oil chambers, leading to improved thermal management of oil and lubrication efficiency. The challenges here lie in the trade‐off between increasing controllability and minimizing the addition of new components, which adds unwanted production and maintenance costs. This paper formulates the oil system architecture design as a constrained, multiobjective optimization problem. An architecture is described using a graph with nodes representing components and edges representing interconnections between components. A fixed set of nodes called the architecture template is provided as an input and the edges are optimized for a multicriteria objective function. A heuristic method for determining similarities between the different oil chamber flow requirements is presented. This is used in the optimization to evaluate the controllability objective based on the structure of the valve architecture. The methodology provides benefits to system designers by selecting cheaper architectures with fewer valves when the need to control oil chambers separately is small. The effect of manipulating the cost/controllability criteria weightings is investigated to show the impact on the resulting architecture. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1002/sys.21430 |
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This is used in the optimization to evaluate the controllability objective based on the structure of the valve architecture. The methodology provides benefits to system designers by selecting cheaper architectures with fewer valves when the need to control oil chambers separately is small. 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There is an increasing interest in oil system architectures which utilize electric pumps and/or valves to give optimized control of flows to individual oil chambers, leading to improved thermal management of oil and lubrication efficiency. The challenges here lie in the trade‐off between increasing controllability and minimizing the addition of new components, which adds unwanted production and maintenance costs. This paper formulates the oil system architecture design as a constrained, multiobjective optimization problem. An architecture is described using a graph with nodes representing components and edges representing interconnections between components. A fixed set of nodes called the architecture template is provided as an input and the edges are optimized for a multicriteria objective function. A heuristic method for determining similarities between the different oil chamber flow requirements is presented. This is used in the optimization to evaluate the controllability objective based on the structure of the valve architecture. The methodology provides benefits to system designers by selecting cheaper architectures with fewer valves when the need to control oil chambers separately is small. 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There is an increasing interest in oil system architectures which utilize electric pumps and/or valves to give optimized control of flows to individual oil chambers, leading to improved thermal management of oil and lubrication efficiency. The challenges here lie in the trade‐off between increasing controllability and minimizing the addition of new components, which adds unwanted production and maintenance costs. This paper formulates the oil system architecture design as a constrained, multiobjective optimization problem. An architecture is described using a graph with nodes representing components and edges representing interconnections between components. A fixed set of nodes called the architecture template is provided as an input and the edges are optimized for a multicriteria objective function. A heuristic method for determining similarities between the different oil chamber flow requirements is presented. This is used in the optimization to evaluate the controllability objective based on the structure of the valve architecture. The methodology provides benefits to system designers by selecting cheaper architectures with fewer valves when the need to control oil chambers separately is small. The effect of manipulating the cost/controllability criteria weightings is investigated to show the impact on the resulting architecture.</abstract><cop>Hoboken</cop><pub>Wiley Subscription Services, Inc</pub><doi>10.1002/sys.21430</doi><tpages>15</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2232-5960</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | architectural design Architecture Chambers Controllability Design optimization Graph theory Graphical representations Heuristic methods Lubrication Maintenance costs Multiple criterion Multiple objective analysis Nodes Stability System effectiveness Thermal management transportation & storage Turbofan engines Valves |
title | Optimized synthesis of cost‐effective, controllable oil system architectures for turbofan engines |
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