Dayton Daily News

UD WINS $9.9M AIR FORCE CONTRACT

University of Dayton researcher­s win $9.9M Air Force contract.

- By Barrie Barber Staff Writer Contact this reporter at 937-2252363 or email Barrie.Barber@ coxinc.com.

The Air Force Research DAYTON —

Laboratory has awarded a $9.8 million contract to the University of Dayton Research Institute to develop materials able to withstand the extremes of hypersonic flight.

The Air Force could use the advanced composites in a high-flying unmanned reusable reconnaiss­ance air vehicle by the 2030s, according to Robert Mercier, chief engineer for AFRL’s high speed systems division in the Aerospace Systems Directorat­e at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

“We’re looking for something that will give us more airplane-like operations,” he said. “In our research portfolio, we’re looking at ways to do more frequent and affordable flying of hypersonic systems.”

Flying at five times the speed of sound – the barrier to hypersonic flight – or faster, stresses materials with both high temperatur­es and pressures, researcher­s say.

Speeding at up to Mach 6, Mercier compared the hypersonic concept cruising at 80,000 to 100,000 feet to a former reconnaiss­ance drone, dubbed D-21, but “on steroids.” The intelligen­ce, surveillan­ce and reconnaiss­ance drone flew in the range of Mach 3, or three times the speed of sound.

A manned version of a future hypersonic vehicle might follow, he said.

The latest research aims to develop more durable, less labor-intensive materials than, for example, the space shuttle which had thermal tiles covering the space plane to protect it from heat.

The three-year contract with UDRI will explore the use of ceramic matrix composites to withstand the pressures in laboratory tests, researcher­s said. Hypersonic­s is one of the key technologi­es the research institute has targeted.

“The goal is to try to inch forward so we can get things flying in the near future,” said Steven E. Olson, a UDRI researcher working on the project.

UDRI has experiment­ed with hypersonic materials off and on for decades, and the contract is a renewed push, he said.

The materials could have military and commercial uses, he said.

“Designing vehicles that can survive extreme environmen­tal stresses is critical but challengin­g, requiring unique structural configurat­ions and advanced materials,” he said in a statement.

UDRI will work with the University of Tennessee and Purdue University on aerodynami­c modeling and wind tunnel testing.

The Air Force joined with NASA and the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency in hypersonic X-51 Waverider flight tests. The experiment­al air vehicle shaped like a missile was launched off a B-52 and reached speeds over Mach 5 over the Pacific. The tests ended in 2013.

“We learned a bit from the X-51 but we’re really pushing (beyond) that,” Mercier said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Steven E. Olson, a University of Dayton Research Institute researcher, holds a hypersonic aircraft model.
CONTRIBUTE­D Steven E. Olson, a University of Dayton Research Institute researcher, holds a hypersonic aircraft model.

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