Airport Freight and Cargo Transfer System
20220063807 · 2022-03-03
Assignee
Inventors
- Stuart Mark Ferrell (Burnsville, MN, US)
- William T. Reed (New York, NY, US)
- Joseph J. Cox (Portland, OR, US)
Cpc classification
B64D2009/006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64C25/405
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64D9/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64F1/322
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T50/80
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A system and a method are provided for safely and efficiently transferring cargo and freight packed in ULD containers directly between an airport freight terminal and freight aircraft. An enclosed freightway is designed to provide a direct connection between the freight terminal and aircraft cargo doors. The enclosed freightway is structured and sized to move ULD containers automatically or manually between freight aircraft and freight terminals. Different freightway configurations enable direct connection between the freight terminal and freight aircraft main cargo door when freight aircraft are driven by electric taxi drive systems or aircraft engines and parked in nose-in orientations and when freight aircraft are driven by electric taxi drive systems and parked in parallel orientations at the freight terminal. An alternative embodiment provides direct connections between freight aircraft cargo doors and interior loading docks for aircraft driven with electric taxi drive systems.
Claims
1. A freight transfer system that moves containerized freight between freight aircraft and airport freight facilities with improved safety and efficiency, comprising: a. a freight aircraft with cargo doors comprising at least a main cargo door connected to a cargo hold within a fuselage of said freight aircraft; b. a freight terminal at an airport with a freight staging area located a distance above a ground surface to transfer cargo between said freight terminal and said freight aircraft cargo hold; c. ULD containers configured to hold cargo and to have a cross-section to fit within said freight aircraft cargo hold, each of said ULD containers having a bottom surface, a top surface opposite said bottom surface, and a side section angled to fit within a cross-section of said fuselage; and d. a freight transfer bridge with a first end connected to said freight staging area and a second end removably connectable to one of said cargo doors, said freight transfer bridge configured to provide an enclosed direct freight transfer connection between said freight staging area and said freight aircraft cargo hold, to have a cross-sectional configuration structured and sized to movably accommodate said ULD containers, and to support a container conveyance system in transfer contact with said bottom surfaces of said ULD containers.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein said freight transfer bridge is configured to provide said enclosed direct freight transfer connection between said freight staging area and a main cargo door on a freight aircraft parked in a nose-in orientation perpendicular to said freight terminal, said freight transfer bridge comprising a major section extending perpendicularly from said freight terminal and a contiguous minor section extending at a right angle to said major section and oriented parallel to said freight terminal to connect said freight transfer bridge to said main cargo door and to provide said enclosed direct freight transfer connection between said parked aircraft cargo hold and said freight staging area.
3. The system of claim 2, wherein said main cargo door on said freight aircraft is located in a forward portion of said aircraft on a right side or on a left side of said aircraft and said freight transfer bridge minor section has a right angle direction relative to said major section to provide said enclosed direct freight transfer connection between said freight staging area and said main cargo door to said cargo hold and said freight aircraft parked in said nose-in orientation.
4. The system of claim 3, wherein said container conveyance system in a floor portion of said major section comprises at least a system of rotatably mounted parallel rollers, and said floor conveyance system in a floor portion of said minor section comprises at least a ball mat with a plurality of balls rotatable in multiple directions.
5. The system of claim 1, wherein said freight aircraft is equipped with pilot-controllable landing gear wheel-mounted electric drive motors.
6. The system of claim 5, wherein said main cargo door on said freight aircraft is located in a forward portion of said freight aircraft or in an aft portion of said freight aircraft on a right side or on a left side of said freight aircraft, and said freight transfer bridge has a longitudinal configuration perpendicular to said freight terminal to form said enclosed direct freight transfer connection between said freight staging area and said cargo hold when said freight aircraft is parked at said freight terminal in a parallel orientation with a longest axis of said freight aircraft oriented parallel to said freight terminal.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein said container conveyance system in a floor portion of said freight transfer bridge comprises at least a system of rotatably mounted parallel rollers.
8. The system of claim 3, wherein a ceiling portion of said freight transfer bridge supports a ULD container overhead conveyance track to removably connect with a conveyance track connector element on each said ULD container top surface.
9. The system of claim 8, wherein said ULD container overhead conveyance track extends beyond said freight transfer bridge into said cargo hold and beyond said freight transfer bridge into said freight staging area.
10. The system of claim 3, wherein said freight aircraft are equipped for ground movement with pilot-controllable landing gear wheel-mounted electric taxi drive systems.
11. The system of claim 3, wherein ground movement of said freight aircraft is controlled by operating aircraft engines.
12. The system of claim 9, wherein said freight transfer bridge has a rectangular cross-section.
13. A method for safely and efficiently transferring ULD containers loaded with cargo to be transported by air freight in all weather conditions, comprising: a. providing a freight aircraft with a cargo hold within a fuselage of the freight aircraft accessible by at least a main cargo door, a freight terminal with a freight staging area where the freight aircraft parks to unload and load cargo, and ULD containers holding cargo to be unloaded from and loaded into the cargo hold; b. providing an enclosed freight transfer bridge extending between the freight staging area and the freight aircraft cargo hold and having a cross-sectional configuration structured and sized to accommodate and move the ULD containers with a container movement system supported by at least a floor of the enclosed freight transfer bridge; c. parking the freight aircraft in a nose-in orientation or in a parallel orientation to the freight terminal, extending the enclosed freight transfer bridge and directly connecting the aircraft cargo hold to the freight terminal staging area with the enclosed freight transfer bridge; d. moving incoming ULD containers with the container movement system from the cargo hold through the enclosed freight transfer bridge to the freight terminal staging area to unload the ULD containers from the freight aircraft; and e. moving outgoing ULD containers with the container movement system from the freight terminal staging area through the enclosed freight transfer bridge and the main cargo door to load the freight aircraft cargo hold.
14. The method of claim 13, further comprising providing a reversible ULD container conveyance track supported in a ceiling portion of said enclosed freight transfer bridge with a cargo hold end and a freight terminal end, attaching the ULD containers to be unloaded from the freight aircraft to the cargo hold end at the main cargo door, moving the ULD containers in a first direction through the enclosed freight transfer bridge to the freight terminal end and unloading the ULD containers; attaching the ULD containers to be loaded onto the freight aircraft to the freight terminal end of the reversible ULD container conveyance track, moving the ULD containers in a reverse direction through the enclosed freight transfer bridge to the cargo hold end, and loading the ULD containers in the cargo hold.
15. The method of claim 13, further comprising equipping the freight aircraft with pilot-controllable landing gear wheel-mounted electric taxi drive systems and driving the freight aircraft with the electric taxi drive systems to park the freight aircraft at the freight terminal in a nose-in orientation perpendicular to the freight terminal or in a parallel orientation with the longest axis of the freight aircraft parallel to the freight terminal.
16. The method of claim 15, further comprising driving the freight aircraft with the electric taxi drive systems or with aircraft engines to the freight terminal and parking the freight aircraft in the nose-in orientation at the freight terminal staging area, providing an enclosed freight transfer bridge configured to form a right angle connection between the freight terminal staging area and a forward cargo door on a left side or on a right side of the freight aircraft, providing the enclosed freight transfer bridge with a container movement system configured to move the ULD containers around a right angle corner, and moving the ULD containers with the container movement system through the right angle enclosed freight transfer bridge in a first direction to unload the ULD containers from the freight aircraft and in a second, reverse, direction to load the ULD containers onto the freight aircraft.
17. The method of claim 15, further comprising driving the freight aircraft with the electric taxi drive systems, parking the freight aircraft in the parallel orientation to the freight terminal staging area, providing at least one enclosed freight transfer bridge configured to form a perpendicular connection between the freight terminal staging area and one or both of a forward or rear cargo door on a right side or on a left side of the freight aircraft, the container movement system being configured to move the ULD containers in a linear direction, and moving the ULD containers with the container movement system in a first direction through the enclosed freight transfer bridge to unload the ULD containers from the freight aircraft and in a second, reverse, direction to load the ULD containers onto the freight aircraft.
18. A freight transfer method that provides a direct freight transfer connection between airport freight terminals and freight warehouse freight loading areas located at an airport and freight aircraft cargo doors, comprising: a. providing freight aircraft equipped with pilot-controllable landing gear wheel-mounted electric taxi drive systems to power ground movement of the freight aircraft and with cargo holds, each freight aircraft having at least a cargo door located in a forward section of the freight aircraft or at least a cargo door located in an aft section of the freight aircraft accessing the cargo holds; b. providing a freight terminal or freight warehouse at the airport with interior freight loading areas configured to receive at least a forward end or an aft end of the freight aircraft and to form a direct freight transfer connection between a freight loading area and the freight aircraft cargo hold through a forward or an aft cargo door; c. driving a freight aircraft having a forward cargo door with the electric taxi drive systems in a nose-in forward direction into the freight loading area and forming the direct freight transfer connection directly between the interior freight loading area and the freight aircraft cargo hold through the forward cargo door; d. driving a freight aircraft having an aft cargo door with the electric taxi drive system in a tail-in reverse direction into the freight loading area and forming the direct freight transfer connection directly between the interior freight loading area and the freight aircraft cargo hold through the aft cargo door; and e. transferring freight directly between the freight aircraft cargo hold and the freight loading area through the forward cargo door or the reverse cargo door to unload and load the freight aircraft, and driving the freight aircraft with the electric taxi drive systems in a reverse direction or in a forward direction out of the freight loading areas.
19. The method of claim 18, further comprising driving an arriving freight aircraft having a forward cargo door with the electric taxi drive systems in the forward direction into an interior freight loading area with a loading platform positioned at the level of the forward cargo door, parking the freight aircraft with at least a forward nose end within the interior freight loading area and the forward cargo door aligned and connected directly with the loading platform, transferring freight through the forward cargo door between the freight aircraft cargo hold and the interior freight loading area using the loading platform, and driving the departing freight aircraft with the electric taxi drive systems in reverse out of the interior freight loading area.
20. The method of claim 18, further comprising driving an arriving freight aircraft having an aft cargo door with the electric taxi drive systems in the reverse direction into an interior freight loading area with a loading platform positioned at the level of the aft cargo door, maneuvering the freight aircraft to park with at least a tail end within the interior freight loading area and the aft cargo door aligned and connected directly with the loading platform, transferring freight through the aft cargo door between the freight aircraft cargo hold and the interior freight loading area using the loading platform, and driving the departing freight aircraft with the electric taxi drive systems forward out of the interior freight loading area.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0028] As discussed above, the increase in online commerce and expectations for next day and faster delivery of goods has produced an increase in the amount of cargo transported by air and the frequency with which these goods are transported to meet delivery expectations. Until relatively recently, freight aircraft flew primarily at night to ensure quick delivery; however, this has changed, and now freight aircraft fly all day as well as all night to satisfy customer expectations for rapid delivery. As discussed above, preparing goods for air transport is increasingly being done with automated systems and methods that use the latest technology. Once the goods to be transported by air reach an airport freight terminal, however, they are loaded on cargo aircraft using manual loading systems and methods in use for many decades. The freight and cargo transfer system and method of the present invention enables an airport to move cargo between freight terminals and freight aircraft more quickly and efficiently and with less labor than is possible with existing systems and methods.
[0029] The terms “cargo” and “freight” are used interchangeably herein to refer to consumer and commercial goods, materials, equipment, and the like that are transported by air from a provider or source of such goods. The term “freight aircraft,” as used herein, describes aircraft commonly referred to as freighters that carry and transport only cargo and not passengers. An airport “cargo terminal,” “freight terminal,” or “freight-handling facility,” as used herein, describes an airside facility that is typically a structure that may be separate from an airport's main or passenger terminal. Cargo from different sources, including cargo unloaded from arriving freight aircraft and cargo delivered by trucks, may be temporarily held in a freight terminal for loading on a departing freight aircraft.
[0030] A “ULD” or “unit load device,” as used herein, refers to a container used to load a large number of items of cargo into a single unit for transport. A ULD typically has a configuration that is contoured, as shown in the drawings, to permit ULDs to fit within the typically rounded configuration of an aircraft cargo hold. The term ULD may also include a pallet; the system and method of the present invention are primarily directed to the transfer of cargo in ULD containers. The use of a manifest or packing list, which may be in electronic or other forms, allows the contents of ULDs to be tracked.
[0031] The freight aircraft described in connection with the present invention may advantageously be driven on the ground by electric taxi drive systems. “Electric taxi drive systems” and “electric taxi systems,” as used herein, refer to pilot-controllable landing gear wheel-mounted drive systems used to drive aircraft independently of and without reliance on operation of aircraft main engines and tugs or external tow vehicles. Electric taxi drive systems may include landing gear wheel-mounted electric drive motors, gear or roller traction drive systems, clutches, and other components activatable to power landing gear wheels and drive the aircraft during ground travel in response to pilot control. An example of one electric taxi drive system developed by Applicant to drive an aircraft during ground travel without reliance on operation of the aircraft's main engines or attachment to tugs is described in commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 10,308,352, the disclosure of which is fully incorporated herein in its entirety by reference. Other drive systems using drive motors that are not electric, including, for example, hydraulic or pneumatic drive motors, may also drive aircraft in connection with the airport freight and cargo transfer system and method of the present invention and are contemplated to be included within the terms “electric taxi drive systems.” An electric taxi drive system may be mounted completely within a volume defined by walls of a landing gear wheel in one or more nose or main landing gear wheels. In a preferred embodiment, electric taxi drive systems are mounted completely within defined wheel wall volumes in both wheels of an aircraft nose landing gear and are controlled by a pilot or flight crew from the aircraft cockpit with controls designed to operate the electric taxi drive system, power the nose landing gear wheels, and drive the aircraft during ground travel without reliance on the aircraft's main engines and external assistance from tugs. While electric taxi drive systems may typically be powered by an aircraft auxiliary power unit, another source of electric power, for example batteries and solar or other power on the aircraft, may be used to power the electric taxi drive systems. Freight aircraft docked for freight transfer as described herein may also employ connections to ground power when necessary.
[0032] The freight aircraft described in connection with the present invention may also be driven on the ground conventionally with aircraft engines, although these aircraft will not be able to perform all of the aircraft maneuvers that can be performed by a freight aircraft driven with electric taxi drive systems.
[0033] Referring to the drawings, which may not be drawn to scale,
[0034] Aircraft 10 also has one or more cargo doors that are positioned to provide access to each cargo level. A forward cargo door 22 and an aft cargo door 24 provide access to the lower cargo level 18. Aircraft 10 may also have an aft door 26 for bulk cargo. A main cargo door 28 may typically be located on the left side of the aircraft 10. The main cargo door 28 in aircraft 10 is located toward the rear of the aircraft. As noted, aircraft 10 is an example of only one type of freight aircraft, and cargo doors may be located in other locations on different aircraft. A main cargo door, for example, may be located in the forward section of the aircraft rather than in the aft section as shown in
[0035] The rectangular shapes 30 in the upper level 20 of the cargo hold represent ULD containers; not all of the ULDs 30 are labeled. The rectangular shapes 32 in the lower level 18 of the cargo hold also represent ULDs and may be containers or another kind of ULD, such as a pallet.
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040] When a freight aircraft 10, which is equipped with landing gear wheel-mounted electric taxi drive systems to power ground travel, arrives at an airport to unload and load cargo, the aircraft 10 may be driven on the ground to the airport freight terminal with the electric taxi systems and maneuvered into a parking location. The ULDs 30 and 32 must be transferred from the cargo hold upper and lower levels (20, 18) to a freight staging area (not shown) at the freight terminal. At the present time, depending upon availability, K-loaders, which, as noted, have limited capacity, must be extended from ground level to a height of a cargo door (22, 24, 26, 28). A number of ULDs, usually one to three, are manually moved from the aircraft cargo hold through a cargo door to a K-loader. The K-loader is then lowered and moved, usually by tractor, to transfer the ULDs to the freight terminal. Unless multiple K-loaders are available, the original K-loader must return to the aircraft 10 and repeat this process until all of the ULDs (30, 32) have been unloaded from the aircraft. When all the arriving ULDs have been unloaded and transferred to the freight terminal, all of the departing ULDs to be transported by a departing freight aircraft 10 must be transferred, one to three at a time with K-loaders and loaded in the cargo hold upper or lower level before the aircraft 10 can take off. As noted, this process may be slowed or stopped in adverse weather conditions.
[0041] The present invention provides a system and a method that facilitates and streamlines the process of transferring ULD containers so that incoming cargo may be unloaded from freight aircraft and outgoing cargo may be loaded on freight aircraft quickly, efficiently, and safely in any weather conditions. The freight transfer system of the present invention provides an enclosed freight transfer bridge, or freightway, sized and structured to transfer ULD containers directly between an airport freight terminal and a freight aircraft. One end of the freightway may be connected to a staging area at the airport freight terminal at the level or height above the ground of a freight aircraft main cargo door, and the opposite end of the freightway is connected to the main cargo door on the freight aircraft. Since cargo doors on different kinds of freight aircraft may be located at different heights above the ground, it is contemplated that the freightway may be vertically adjustable to accommodate differences in freight aircraft cargo door heights. It is also contemplated that multiple freightways may be positioned at different levels at a freight terminal to provide connections with freight aircraft cargo doors located at corresponding different heights above the ground.
[0042]
[0043] The freight aircraft 50 and 60 may be driven by electric taxi drive systems or aircraft engines to park in the nose-in parking locations at the freight terminal 48 shown in
[0044]
[0045] To park in the parallel orientation shown in
[0046]
[0047] The ULD container overhead conveyance track 86 shown in
[0048]
[0049] The major section 53 of the freightway 54 may have a floor conveyance system 83 of multiple parallel rollers 84 that may be rotatably mounted so that they are spaced a convenient distance just above and parallel to the freightway floor (82 in
[0050] Each ULD entering the freight aircraft cargo hold from the freightways 54 and 64, which are perpendicular to the aircraft fuselage, will need to make a 90° angle turn to be transferred to the aircraft's onboard ULD container movement surface, and a ball mat is typically provided inside the aircraft for this. The freightway floor conveyance system aircraft attachment end 95, as indicated above, may be designed to connect with an aircraft cargo hold conveyance system so that ULDs may be moved smoothly between the freightway and the aircraft.
[0051] The freightways 74 and 74a shown in
[0052] The freightways described above may be modified to provide a separate corridor along one side of the freightway (not shown) for the freight aircraft's crew to access the aircraft cockpit from a freight staging level of the freight terminal when the freightway is to be connected to a forward main cargo door. Connection of the modified freightway may require a precise alignment of the modified freightway with the freight aircraft to ensure that the separate corridor connects to an aircraft door with access to the cockpit.
[0053] With the present cargo transfer system and method, cargo in ULD containers may be moved directly between the freight terminal and the freight aircraft through the enclosed freightway without transporting the ULDs outside the freight terminal and without the use of ground service vehicles, K-loaders, and ground personnel. Not only may this process be accomplished efficiently and safely in any weather conditions, but it may be done without risk of collisions and other ground incidents associated with current ULD container transfer processes and with fewer ground personnel than are currently required.
[0054] In an additional embodiment of a freight transfer system and method of the present invention, freight aircraft equipped with electric taxi drive systems may be maneuvered into and out of an airport freight terminal to connect directly with a loading dock or other loading structure inside the freight terminal so that cargo may be transferred directly to the freight aircraft inside the freight terminal. The aircraft maneuvers described in connection with
[0055]
[0056] A freight aircraft 104 that has an aft cargo door 114 may be maneuvered with the electric taxi drive systems to turn after it has arrived at the freight terminal 100 so that the freight aircraft 104 is positioned as shown in
[0057] The foregoing embodiment may require some modifications to freight terminals and freight warehouses to enable the freight aircraft to drive at least partly into the building so that direct connections may be made between loading docks and the aircraft forward and aft cargo doors. It is contemplated that new airport freight terminals and freight warehouses may be specifically constructed to enable freight aircraft powered by electric taxi drive systems to maneuver into the freight transfer locations shown in
[0058] While the present invention has been described with respect to preferred embodiments, this is not intended to be limiting, and other arrangements and structures that perform the required functions are contemplated to be within the scope of the present invention.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0059] The airport freight and cargo transfer system of the present invention will find its primary applicability at airports desiring to increase freight loading efficiency, to enhance safety of freight loading operations when freight is loaded by direct connections between a freight terminal and freight aircraft, and to reduce risks of collisions and ground incidents when the use of external freight loaders, ground service vehicles, and ground personnel is eliminated or reduced.