Publication | Open Access
Addressing the Real-World Challenges in the Development of Propulsion IVHM Technology Experiment (PITEX)
10
Citations
4
References
2004
Year
Unknown Venue
Space VehicleEngineeringAerospace SimulationExperimental TechnologyAerospace SystemReal-world ChallengesSystems EngineeringInstrumentationChemical PropulsionHardware-in-the-loop SimulationMechatronicsRocket EngineComputer EngineeringPropulsionAerospace Propulsion SystemsMain Propulsion SystemPitex AlgorithmsAerospace EngineeringDiagnostic SystemSoftware TestingAerospace Propulsion
The Propulsion IVHM Technology Experiment (PITEX) has been an on-going research effort conducted over several years. PITEX has developed and applied a model-based diagnostic system for the main propulsion system of the X-34 reusable launch vehicle, a space-launch technology demonstrator. The application was simulation-based using detailed models of the propulsion subsystem to generate nominal and failure scenarios during captive carry, which is the most safety-critical portion of the X-34 flight. Since no system-level testing of the X-34 Main Propulsion System (MPS) was performed, these simulated data were used to verify and validate the software system. Advanced diagnostic and signal processing algorithms were developed and tested in real-time on flight-like hardware. In an attempt to expose potential performance problems, these PITEX algorithms were subject to numerous real-world effects in the simulated data including noise, sensor resolution, command/valve talkback information, and nominal build variations. The current research has demonstrated the potential benefits of model-based diagnostics, defined the performance metrics required to evaluate the diagnostic system, and studied the impact of real-world challenges encountered when monitoring propulsion subsystems.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1