High Strain Lead
20220369426 · 2022-11-17
Inventors
Cpc classification
H05B2203/011
ELECTRICITY
F03D1/0675
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D80/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F03D1/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A resistive heater system comprising a braided and flattened electrical lead connected to a heating blanket or coating at one end of the lead. The braided and flattened electrical lead comprises a folded-over section that forms an angle in the lead of 70 to 110°. The invention also includes an aircraft comprising the heater system. Nonlimiting examples of aircraft include helicopter, drone, and airplane.
Claims
1. A resistive heater system comprising a high strain lead for high strain applications, comprising: a resistive heating blanket or coating; a braided and flattened electrical lead connected to the heating blanket or coating at one end of the lead; wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead comprising a folded-over section forms an angle in the lead of 70 to 110°.
2. The resistive heater system of claim 1 wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead comprising a folded-over section forms an angle in the lead of 80 to 100°.
3. The resistive heater system of claim 1 wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead comprising a folded-over section forms an angle in the lead of 85 to 95°.
4. The resistive heater system of claim 1 wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead comprises two ends, a first end and a second end, and wherein the first end is connected to the heating blanket or coating and wherein the second end is connected to a power source.
5. The resistive heater system of claim 1 wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead has a length and wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead is attached to a substrate over at least 80% of the length of the braid.
6. The resistive heater system of claim 1 wherein the heating blanket or coating is attached to the surface of an airfoil.
7. The resistive heater system of claim 1 wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead comprises a protective polymeric overcoating.
8. The resistive heater system of claim 1 wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead is a flattened copper braid.
9. The resistive heater system of claim 1 wherein the folded-over section preferably forms approximately an isosceles right triangle with sides of between 2 mm to 2 cm.
10. A rotor blade comprising the resistive heater system of claim 1.
11. An aircraft comprising the resistive heater system of claim 1.
12. The aircraft of claim 11 wherein the aircraft is a helicopter, drone, or airplane.
13. The aircraft of claim 11 wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead is countersunk into the surface of an airfoil.
14. The aircraft of claim 11 where the braid penetrates the aircraft skin
15. The aircraft of claim 11 wherein the braided and flattened electrical lead is not set in a matrix and remains free to stretch.
16. The aircraft of claim 11 wherein an electrical connection between a power source and a resistive heating blanket or coating consists essentially of the braided and flattened electrical lead.
17. The aircraft of claim 11 wherein an electrical connection between a power source and a resistive heating blanket or coating consists of the braided and flattened electrical lead.
Description
[0007]
[0008] A braid is a collection of intertwined fibers or threads, in some preferred embodiments, three or more threads forming a regular diagonal pattern down its length. The conductive braid is preferably made of copper but may be made of other flexible conductive wires that are formed into a braid. The braid structure is also advantageous for good electrical contact to a coating material such as a conductive epoxy or a coating material that forms a resistive heater blanket. A heating blanket (also called a coating) can be any heating blanket; preferred blankets are formed of carbon nanotubes (CNTs).
[0009] The continuous length of the braid may include the electrical contact area (buss bar) section of the braid that is intended to be in electrical contact with the heater material; the length between the buss bar and the intended corner location; the folded-over corner; the distance from the corner to either another corner, a system interface connector (typically at the wing or rotor root) if utilized, and the remaining distance to a supply binding location if a connector is not utilized.
[0010] The braid could extend from a location on the wing such as the wing tip to power supply interface inside the aircraft fuselage or engine nacelle if an appropriate pass-through is provided where the braid penetrates the aircraft skin.
[0011] One type of braid that was evaluated was Hexacon “Hex Wik” W59-25, which is twenty-five feet of un-fluxed copper braid 0.150 inches width before flattening, and available in lengths up to 100 feet. The braid was compressed to a thickness of 0.050 to 0.010 inch. The folded-over region covers a triangular area approximately 0.15 inch at the legs and 0.21 inch at the hypotenuse, with a thickness of approximately 0.024 inch. The braid was secured in place with high-strain epoxy resin materials compatible with the substrate. The braid was interfaced to a carbon nano-tube heater material using a silver epoxy treatment on the braid and direct spray-on of CNT/binder dispersion. Connection to the power source was demonstrated by soldering the braid to a round hook-up wire. In production a connection can be soldered into a solder-cup terminal of a connector such as MIL-DTL-38999 series circular connectors. The thickness of the fold-over corner was 0.025 inch, which is thinner than the rounded-corner of similar radius at 0.028 inch (measurements vary depending on bend radius).
[0012] A preferred braid has a length of 10 cm to 30 m, in some embodiments 1 m to 20 m. A preferred braid has a diameter, prior to flattening, of at least 2 mm or at least 3 mm up to 3 cm or 2 cm or 1 cm; and a flattening (reduction) of at least 80% of the diameter or at least 60% of the diameter, or at least 40% of the diameter, or at least 20% of the diameter. At the foldover, the folded-over section preferably forms approximately an isosceles right triangle with sides of at least 2 mm, or at least 4 mm, or at least 6 mm to at most 2 cm or at most 1 cm, and a hypotenuse at least 3 mm, or at least 5 mm, or at least 7 mm to at most 3 cm or at most 2 cm.
[0013] On an aircraft, the braid lead could be adhered to the surface of a wing or rotor with or without primer on a dielectric substrate (e.g., fiberglass rotor) or over an electrically insulating layer such as primer on a conductive or semiconductive substrate (e.g., carbon-fiber wing). The braid lead can be countersunk below the wing surface to result in a flush finish surface.