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Air Data Probe Anomalies in Flight through Measured High Ice Water Content ConditionsHigh concentrations of ice crystals in convective storms have caused anomalous air temperature and airspeed readings during commercial and research flight operations. These anomalies occur when ice crystals are ingested in the heated probe inlet, melt or partially melt to liquid water, and then refreeze or remain in a liquid state depending on the probe heat and cloud conditions. In pitot probes, the refreezing may cause complete blockage of the total pressure, which causes airspeed anomalies. In total air temperature probes, the melted ice water may flow near the temperature sensing element and cause the total air temperature reading to approach 0 degree Celsius. During the High Ice Water Content (HIWC) RADAR and HIWC-2022 flight campaigns and the Convective Process Experiment (CPEX-CV) flight campaign, a total of 71 anomalies were recorded on the NASA DC-8 pitot probes when subjected to specific flight and cloud conditions. Similarly, a research TAT probe mounted near the pitot probes had 19 anomalies. This paper presents analyses of the measured natural conditions that led to these TAT and pitot anomalies, identifies two types of pitot probe anomalies, applies a concentration factor to estimate local TWC conditions near the TAT and pitot probes, and identifies the static air temperature and pressure altitude where the anomalies occurred on the Part 33 Appendix D envelope.
Document ID
20240008208
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Thomas P Ratvasky
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
J Walter Strapp
(Met Analytics, Inc)
Lyle E Lilie
(Science Engineering Associates)
Aaron Bansemer
(National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder, United States)
Ru-Ching Chen
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
Date Acquired
June 27, 2024
Subject Category
Aeronautics (General)
Instrumentation and Photography
Meeting Information
Meeting: FAA Icing Weather Tools Workshop
Location: Boulder, CO
Country: US
Start Date: September 17, 2024
Sponsors: Federal Aviation Administration
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 081876.02.03.50.19.01.04
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
Aircraft Icing
Aircraft Instrumentation
Airspeed Indicators
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