Ice-phobic and durable coatings for the aerospace and energy sectors (ICELIP)
Lead Participant:
CAV Advanced Technologies Limited
Abstract
Icing represents a complex and expensive problem in different industrial and energy applications -- aircraft, wind turbines, power lines -- causing incidents and severe accidents. The main mitigation methods rely on mechanical breaking of the ice, electrical heating, and de-icing chemicals. These are expensive, inefficient, unreliable, and environmentally harmful.
The aim of the ICELIP project is to develop a passive ice-repellent coating which also provides adequate durability for aircraft applications. This will have impacts not only in aviation, but also in other sectors (other transport: rail, maritime, automotive, and energy: wind turbines, power lines). The main benefits include: increased safety by 4%, more environmentally friendly products (avoiding discharge of 100 million litres of de-icing fluids and cutting emissions of 80million tonnes of CO2 by reducing aircraft weight and, thus, fuel consumption), more cost-efficient products (saving £7bn/year in fuel), and improved energy efficiency (e.g. increasing wind energy production by 20%).
The ICELIP project is based on previous R&D work of part of the consortium, focused on the development of an ice-repellent coating comprising nano-additives incorporated in a standard aerospace clear coat. The coating system showed an outstanding combination of ice-repellency and durability (TRL 3-4) which will need further development and testing in order to be suitable for the aerospace market.
The aim of the ICELIP project is to develop a passive ice-repellent coating which also provides adequate durability for aircraft applications. This will have impacts not only in aviation, but also in other sectors (other transport: rail, maritime, automotive, and energy: wind turbines, power lines). The main benefits include: increased safety by 4%, more environmentally friendly products (avoiding discharge of 100 million litres of de-icing fluids and cutting emissions of 80million tonnes of CO2 by reducing aircraft weight and, thus, fuel consumption), more cost-efficient products (saving £7bn/year in fuel), and improved energy efficiency (e.g. increasing wind energy production by 20%).
The ICELIP project is based on previous R&D work of part of the consortium, focused on the development of an ice-repellent coating comprising nano-additives incorporated in a standard aerospace clear coat. The coating system showed an outstanding combination of ice-repellency and durability (TRL 3-4) which will need further development and testing in order to be suitable for the aerospace market.
Lead Participant | Project Cost | Grant Offer |
---|---|---|
CAV Advanced Technologies Limited, Newcastle Upon Tyne | £201,330 | £ 120,798 |
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Participant |
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Twi Limited, Cambridge | £224,878 | £ 224,878 |
Promethean Particles Limited, Nottingham | £227,129 | £ 158,990 |
London South Bank University, United Kingdom | £186,410 | £ 186,410 |
Opus Materials Technologies Ltd., YORK | £242,932 | £ 170,052 |
Innvotek Ltd | £216,234 | £ 151,364 |
BAE Systems (Operations) Limited, Farnborough, United Kingdom | £71,157 | £ 35,578 |
People |
ORCID iD |
Martin Wood (Project Manager) |