Skip to main content

Aircraft icing detection via flow-induced ambient random noise: from theory to wind tunnel experiments

Buy Article:

$15.00 + tax (Refund Policy)

Aircraft icing is a serious threat to flight safety. This paper presents a passive approach to detect ice accreted on an airfoil using flow-induced random noise considering spatially-inhomogeneous transient excitations. Under the assumption of diffuse-field, by computing the cross-correlation of ambient vibration measured at two receivers and band-pass filtering it, the guided wave dispersion curve of the structure can be well-reconstructed, by which one can estimate the ice thickness by matching the reconstructed dispersion curve with its theoretical model. In practice, however, the diffuse-field assumption may not hold as spatially-inhomogeneous strong transient excitations exist. The associated directional wave propagation generates additional peaks in the cross-correlation and this contaminates the ice detection result. Therefore, this paper proposes a signal processing technique to identify and suppress the contributions from the transient source in the measurements, by which a reliable dispersion curve reconstruction and an accurate ice detection can be retrieved. The proposed method is shown to be efficient via a wind tunnel experiment. The passive ice detection method is specifically suitable for aircraft online monitoring because only passive sensors are needed which can be tiny, light, and mounted on the internal surface of fuselage skin without any influence on aircraft aerodynamics.

The requested document is freely available to subscribers. Users without a subscription can purchase this article.

Sign in

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: Beihang University

Publication date: 04 October 2024

More about this publication?
  • The Noise-Con conference proceedings are sponsored by INCE/USA and the Inter-Noise proceedings by I-INCE. NOVEM (Noise and Vibration Emerging Methods) conference proceedings are included. All NoiseCon Proceedings one year or older are free to download. InterNoise proceedings from outside the USA older than 10 years are free to download. Others are free to INCE/USA members and member societies of I-INCE.

  • Membership Information
  • INCE Subject Classification
  • Ingenta Connect is not responsible for the content or availability of external websites
  • Access Key
  • Free content
  • Partial Free content
  • New content
  • Open access content
  • Partial Open access content
  • Subscribed content
  • Partial Subscribed content
  • Free trial content