This sensor fires three infrared lasers
into clouds. Credit: Brenda Ahearn, Michigan Engineering.
Pilots,
drivers and automated safety systems in cars and airplanes could be alerted to
icy hazards by a pair of sensors developed at the University of Michigan.
Ice on roads causes about 20% of
weather-related car crashes each
year, and ice buildup on planes causes roughly 10% of all
fatal air carrier crashes by
interfering with aerodynamics and controls. For instance, a flight from
Brazilian airliner Voepass Linhas Aéreas crashed near São Paulo on Aug. 9,
2024, after the plane's de-icing systems failed, according to a report in the
Aviation Safety Network. An Air France flight also crashed in the Atlantic
Ocean on June 1, 2009, after ice blocked the probes that measure the plane's
speed. In both cases, all occupants died.
"More people are traveling by plane
each year, and there's more pressure to fly in all weather conditions,"
said Nilton Renno, U-M professor of climate and space sciences and engineering
who led the development of the technology.
"Our technology can help airplanes,
drones, cars and trucks be as safe and efficient as possible."
Renno's team tested their system of two complementary sensors in a single engine airplane, as well as a light business jet equipped with scientific instruments for taking reference measurements. The results of the experiments are described in the journal Scientific Reports.
How the new sensors work
One sensor lies flush against the
plane, using microwaves to detect when ice forms on its surface. Another sensor
uses lasers to detect freezing rain and large water drops in clouds, alerting
pilots of danger in advance. This sensor could also work in cars and trucks,
detecting ice on roads.
Development of the microwave sensor
began after the Phoenix lander mission, which found evidence for liquid water
on Mars. Renno wanted future missions to measure the amount of moisture in
soils and differentiate water from ice. But Renno, who is also a pilot, started
thinking about how he could help pilots after he found his personal airplane
covered in ice one winter. Knowing he couldn't fly safely, he instead went home
and brainstormed solutions.
"Icing of airplanes is a
worldwide problem that can happen anytime of the year with aircraft of all
sizes, depending on the flight altitude," Renno said. "I realized
that that was a problem that I could do something about because of my background
as both a pilot and an atmospheric scientist."
Airplanes today detect ice with two styles of probes that protrude from the plane, but because they extend above the surface, they don't provide information about what's on the plane. The microwave sensor directly detects ice buildup because it's embedded in the plane's surface. The frequency of the sensor's microwave signal changes when the sensor is covered by water or ice.
This flat sensor emits microwaves, which
can help pilots know when ice is forming on the surface of a plane. Credit:
Nilton Renno, University of Michigan.
Laser sensor capabilities and applications
The complementary sensor detects
freezing rain within seconds of entering a cloud by firing three infrared
lasers with different wavelengths. The first two beams are absorbed by water
and ice differently, so the ratio of the return signals tells pilots whether a
cloud contains ice particles, water droplets or a mix. Planes freeze when they
hit water drops chilled below the freezing point, but ice particles simply
bounce off, so the sensor could help pilots identify a hazardous cloud and fly
away before the plane ices over.
The third laser helps determine the
size of the water droplets and the number of droplets in the cloud by comparing
its return signal with those of the other two lasers. Larger droplets are more
hazardous because they are more likely to hit the plane while smaller droplets
ride the flow of air around the plane.
The lasers could also warn drivers
of black ice before they start sliding, or perhaps trigger the car's automatic
safety systems. Slowing by 4–9 miles per hour can reduce the risk of serious
injury during car accidents by
half, research
shows.
"You can save a lot of lives
by just slowing down when you detect a slippery road ahead," Renno said.
The device was built and developed in part at the U-M Space Physics Research Laboratory. Intelligent Vision Systems, a U-M startup, developed the optical sensor and licensed the technology with the assistance of Innovation Partnerships, which also has patented the sensors. Renno and the University of Michigan have a financial interest in Intelligent Vision Systems.
Provided by University of Michigan College of Engineering
Source: Cars and planes could avoid hazardous ice, freezing rain with new sensors


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