Harnessing the 'Landing Energy'

Votes: 2
Views: 7928

Introduction

When a vehicle needs to be stopped, a mechanism that converts its kinetic energy into heat energy (generally) is deployed. Various types of brakes are used for this purpose. The heat energy produced by this conversion is not in usable form and is lost to the environment.

KERS: Kinetic Energy Recovery System, used in cars is a mechanism of converting the kinetic energy into electrical energy during the braking process. The disadvantage of the process, however, is the limited amount of energy per braking that can be recovered: around 0.11 kWh (in F1 cars). Also, the process happens so fast that the system does not get enough time to absorb all the available energy. Thus we need to look for braking energy recovery from systems where the braking process is gradual and the energy yield from the recovery is high.

A landing aircraft is a perfect example for such a system. A Boeing 737 (landing weight 66,000 kg) and an approach speed of 90 km/h has energy of 5.5 kWh. JFK airport gets 400,000 planes annually. This is equivalent to $100,000 saving in electricity per year per airport, assuming a (poor) recovery efficiency of 50%.

The design proposal is regarding the mechanism of harnessing this ‘Landing Energy.’ It proposes that the aircraft should be stopped by a method which does not convert the kinetic energy to heat energy, but electrical energy.

Existing method

To land the ‘short take off and launch’ aircraft on the aircraft carrier’s deck, each plane is provided with an extended hook attached to the plane's tail. The pilot's goal is to snag the tailhook on one of four arresting cables to bring the aircraft to a halt (check video link). The cables are connected to multi-disc rotary friction brakes or hydraulic cylinder to absorb the energy to stop the aircraft as soon as possible (Illustration 1).

Proposed method

The above method should be employed for stopping the aircraft in airports also. The novelty of the proposal lies in the use of the arresting system for generation of electricity. The arrestor cable is wound around a cylinder which houses the magnetic poles of the generator (Illustration 2).

When the landing aircraft snags and pulls the arrestor cable(s), the magnetic poles’ cylinder is rotated w.r.t an armature, thereby generating electricity (Illustration 3). From the law of conservation of energy it can be deduced that the electricity generation from rotation of the poles’ cylinder would help in reducing the speed of the aircraft, finally bringing it to a halt.

Application

This system could be installed on runways of all airports. The electricity that is produced from the system is used for the needs of the airport. This method would be more economical than recovery of landing energy with a set up mounted on each plane and feeding the recovered energy back to the plane.

Advantages

1. Saves energy
2. Environment friendly
3. Reduction in operation costs
4. Reduction in runway lengths
5. Tried and tested method of braking

Video

Voting

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  • ABOUT THE ENTRANT

  • Name:
    Nikhil Das
  • Type of entry:
    individual
  • Profession:
    Engineer/Designer
  • Nikhil is inspired by:
    the feeling to 'design to make the earth a better place to live in'
  • Software used for this entry:
    CATIA V5
  • Patent status:
    none