Calvin Engineering Students Take Boeing Course

From: Phil de Haan <dehp@calvin.edu>
Date: Mon Apr 04 2005 - 11:39:09 EDT

April 4, 2005 == MEDIA ADVISORY

A small group of engineering students at Calvin College is getting a sneak
peak at the possible airplane of the future thanks to one of their professors.

Paulo Ribeiro is a professor of electrical engineering at Calvin and is
working on a several power projects with the Center for Advanced Power Systems
at Florida State University. Through his connections with FSU he was able to
get his students into an internet-based course being taught by Boeing.

The Boeing Seminar uses WebEx, which Ribeiro describes as a new way to do web
conferencing. WebEx provides specialized web conferencing applications, such
as web meetings, which allows the Calvin students to interactively participate
in a project with fellow students and engineers around the country.

The 10-week seminar series is called "Design and Development of the More
Electric Aircraft (MEA)." Design engineers, graduate and undergraduate
students from Florida A&M, Georgia Tech, the NASA-Glenn Research Center, Ohio
State, Iowa State NAVAIR, and Calvin are taking the class.

Calvin students who have taken part in the seminar are enjoying the
experience.

David Qu, a Calvin junior from China, says "the seminar is a whole new way of
learning. It brings different perspectives from different people right away."

The series began on January 26 with "An Overview of the More Electric
Aircraft," continued through February with talks on such topics as "A
Discussion on the Engine of the More Electric Aircraft" and "A Discussion on
the Power Management and Distribution System" and will conclude in April with
looks at power utilization systems, dynamic modeling and thermal management.
The series will conclude April 20.

Says Ribeiro: "The more electric aircraft uses electrical power to drive
things on airplanes that now are driven by hydraulic, pneumatic or mechanical
means. The more electric aircraft would simply design, reduce weight, increase
efficiency and possibly make them more reliable. With the seminar series
Boeing engineers are bringing students at several prestigious universities and
colleges up-to-speed on where this initiative is headed. Our students are
learning about power generation, power distribution, power conversion,
avionics, thermal management and more."

A recent article in Aviation Today noted that "For years engineers have
dreamed of an all-electric aircraft. They have envisioned a concept called
'power-by-wire,' in which electrical power moves aircraft flight surfaces. Gone
would be the complex, heavy, maintenance-intensive, and (in combat) vulnerable
hydraulic systems with their flammable liquids operating at high temperature
and pressure. Gone, too, would be the miles of tubing, the pumps and valves.
Weight could be shifted from plumbing to passengers, fuel or mission
payloads."

Ribeiro came to Calvin in 2000 after having studied in his native Brazil, then
England (where he earned a Ph.D.) and finally in the United States, where he
added an MBA. In 2002 he was named a Fellow in the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers, a non-profit, technical professional association of more
than 377,000 individual members in 150 countries.

Upcoming Seminars
4/06 - A Discussion on Dynamic Modeling and Simulation
4/13 - A Discussion on Thermal Management Approaches
4/20 - Final and Closing Reviews

Contact Paulo Ribeiro at 616-526-6407
For the Aviation Today article see
http://www.aviationtoday.com/cgi/av/show_mag.cgi?pub=av&mon=1001&file=1001a380.htm

-end-
Received on Mon Apr 4 11:39:17 2005

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