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Spacecraft Cabin Ventilation Fan Research at NASA NASA has recently made the geometry and solid model for a spacecraft cabin ventilation fan prototype available to the public via electronic file downloads from the NASA Technical Report Server. This fan can be used for research and development by many organizations. The fan is 3.5 inches in diameter, 9 inches long, and weighed 3.6 lb. The NASA Quiet Space Fan was designed to make 3.64 inches of water pressure rise at 150.3 cfm of airflow at 12,000 rpm at standard air conditions of 70ºF and 14.7 psia. The performance of the metal version of the fan was measured to be 3.48 inches of water at 150.6 cfm at design speed. A low-noise blade-vane count was chosen to try to reduce tone noise generated by this fan by cutting off the first three blade passing frequency tones. In-duct microphone array measurements indicated that the most evident tones occur for frequencies of 1800 Hz (1 BPF) and 7200 Hz (4 BPF). Using reverberant room standard testing methods, the A-weighted sound power level for the fan operating at design point conditions was measured to be 71 dBA. This report describes the current set of publicly available information for this fan. The fan was designed, optimized, and tested with tools and techniques that NASA has traditionally used for turbofan engine research. This is one way that technology developed for aerospace applications can be used more broadly, since quiet and efficient fans are needed for many ventilation systems on spacecraft, aircraft, watercraft, land vehicles, and buildings.
Document ID
20240004675
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
L Danielle Koch
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
David Stephens
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
Jonathan M Goodman
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
Arman Mirhashemi
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
Rebecca Buehrle
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
Daniel L Sutliff
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
Christopher Allen
(Johnson Space Center Houston, United States)
Date Acquired
April 16, 2024
Subject Category
Aeronautics (General)
Man/System Technology and Life Support
Meeting Information
Meeting: AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference
Location: Rome
Country: IT
Start Date: June 4, 2024
End Date: June 7, 2024
Sponsors: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 094049.01.01.06
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
NASA Technical Management
Keywords
fan, noise, ventilation
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