Fuel Efficiency Analysis of Optimized Flights

University essay from KTH/Lättkonstruktioner, marina system, flyg- och rymdteknik, rörelsemekanik

Abstract: The impact of air travel on the climate, along with its increasing share in CO2 emissions have raised the demand for sustainable air travel solutions. The current aircraft technologies have seen significant improvement throughout the years. Although, the rate at which new aircraft technologies are developed can not keep up with the increased demand for air travel. Hence, a different approach to reduce the aviation’s impact on climate can be achieved by optimizing the vertical flight path in order to reduce the fuel consumption, i.e. using dynamic programming. Upon departure, an optimization of the vertical flight path is initiated and an optimal flight plan is suggested to the flight crew.  The fuel saving produced by the optimal flight plan is a potential saving that can only be fully achieved if the flight crew chose to fly according to the optimized flight path. However, restrictions from the Air Traffic Control, as well as the flight crew’s willingness to follow the optimized flight path can affect the achieved saving. Hence, a tool is developed in order to compute trip fuel consumption from post-flight data obtained from the Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) surveillance technology. A method to identify the start and end positions of cruise segments is successfully implemented. Two methods of calculating the fuel are implemented and compared. The first method is based on simulating the actual flight, which uses the same performance model as for the simulation of the operational flight plan trip and optimized trip. The second method is based on utilizing the ADS-B data to obtain the aircraft speed which in return can be used as a parameter to obtain the fuel flow of the aircraft, hence the trip is not simulated. The results reveals that the simulation method produces flight trajectories that are comparable to the operational and optimized flight plans since they use the same model structure. However, using ADS-B data to obtain fuel consumption represents the actual flight trajectory more accurately.  Furthermore, an optimization algorithm based on the onboard Flight Management Computer is implemented. According to the results, the FMC optimization offers a sufficient optimization of the cruise phase, when compared to the OFP trip, however performs worse than the dynamic programming, which provides a global optimal solution.

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