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Proposal and Development of a High Voltage Variable Frequency Alternating Current Power System for Hybrid Electric Aircraft
Author(s) -
David J. Sadey,
Linda Taylor,
Raymond Beach
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
7th international energy conversion engineering conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2016-4928
Subject(s) - alternating current , high voltage , electrical engineering , voltage , electric power system , current (fluid) , computer science , power (physics) , electronic engineering , physics , engineering , quantum mechanics
The development of ultra-efficient commercial vehicles and the transition to low-carbon emission propulsion are seen as thrust paths within NASA Aeronautics. A critical enabler to these paths comes in the form of hybrid-electric propulsion systems. For megawatt-class systems, the best power system topology for these hybrid-electric propulsion systems is debatable. Current proposals within NASA and the Aero community suggest using a combination of AC and DC for power transmission. This paper proposes an alternative to the current thought model through the use of a primarily high voltage AC power generation, transmission, and distribution systems, supported by the Convergent Aeronautics Solutions (CAS) Project. This system relies heavily on the use of dual-fed induction machines, which provide high power densities, minimal power conversion, and variable speed operation. The paper presents background on the project along with the system architecture, development status and preliminary results.

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