New electronic design for greener aviatio

New electronic design for greener aviation
EU-funded scientists developed smaller-size, lightweight and low-power electronics for actuators that can find application in aircraft.
In today's green aircraft technology development, active flow control 
(AFC) techniques are used to reduce noise, emissions and fuel 
consumption. Microelectromechanical system (MEMS)-based piezoelectric 
actuators for AFC have strict requirements regarding the actuation 
voltage level and the capacitive load. However, commercial high-voltage 
amplifier components are mostly large and heavy or can only drive 
moderate capacitive loads.
Against this backdrop, scientists initiated the EU-funded project 
'High voltage amplifier for MEMS-based active flow control (AFC) 
actuators' (HIVOLA) to develop a high-voltage application-specific 
integrated circuit (ASIC), driving a number of piezoelectric MEMS-based 
actuators. These include micro synthetic-jet actuators and micro 
pulsed-jet actuators.
The developed ASIC consists of six high-voltage amplifier stages 
together with integrated electronics for temperature monitoring and 
phase-shift control. Furthermore, it drives high capacitive loads up to 
600 nanofarad (nF) and enables operation voltages up to 300 V.
In particular, the ASIC design prevents undesired coupling to ensure
 full system functionality even in case of a single sub-circuit 
malfunction. In addition, each high-voltage stage is powered separately 
and can drive a maximum load of 100 nF. In the event of excessive 
heating, an integrated temperature control circuit stops sub-system 
operation.
The HIVOLA solution reduces space, weight and power consumption as 
it miniaturises the electronics in an ASIC, ensuring also high 
efficiency. Due to its successful development, in addition to actuation 
systems, such an ASIC can also find application in other aircraft 
products.
published: 2015-01-30