July 12, 2024

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Sofema (SAS) www.sassofia.com considers key features related to Airbus Fuel Tank Safety Critical Design Configuration Control Limitations (CDCCL) Design Features.

Introduction

  • By design, the Airbus aircraft fuel systems have several features intended to protect them from inadvertent ignition.

Wing / Trim Tank Structure:

  • The material and the many fasteners used to attach the metallic structure ensure that the fuel tank structures are electrically bonded in all the fuel tanks.
  • Composite ribs are bonded using metallic strips attached to the non-metallic structure.
  • All aluminium structural items in the wing, trim, and centre boxes have been finished to protect against short-circuiting of electrical harnesses within the structure.

The combination of the construction and thickness of the tank boundary skins protects against a lightning strike that causes ignition (heat).

Fuel Quantity Indicating (FQI) Equipment:

  • Probes and sensors installed in tanks have low power supply.
  • Electrical connection is done through a terminal block.
  • The protective gap between the probes and the tank structure is maintained.
  • They are electrically isolated from the structure.

Fuel pump:

  • Fuel pumps have safety features to prevent pumps from working in an empty fuel tank.
  • The pumps are tested to show that even after a long working condition in an “empty fuel tank”, the rotating surfaces remain lubricated and thus limit the risk of mechanical ignition.
  • Each of the pumps is contained within an explosion-proof canister.

  – It comprises a pump element electrically bonded to the canister and driven by an electric motor.

  • Electrical connections to all pumps are made outside the tank.

 – The moving parts inside the pump are usually submerged in fuel, so they cannot generate a spark during faulty conditions.

Lightning Protection:

  • All equipment installed within any fuel tank is bonded to the structure

Fuel System Wiring:

  • Only when necessary, wiring is routed inside fuel tanks.
  • This wiring is limited to sensing and monitoring systems with very low energy-carrying requirements to protect against an ignition source resulting from high energy entering the fuel tank via the wiring.
  • External electrical wiring support clamps ensure a cut cable cannot contact the fuel tank boundary or structure in a fuel vapour area.
  • There is a complete segregation between in-tank wiring equipment and fuel calculators from other aircraft system wirings.

Valves:

  • All motor-operated valves within the fuel tanks have actuators outside the tank wall.
  • The valve mechanisms inside the tank are dual-bonded and do not have an ignition hazard.

Pressure Switches:

  • Pump pressure switches are mounted on the tank boundaries.

 – They are separated from the fuel by a diaphragm. The electrical connections are fully sealed and explosion-proof.

Fuel Leaks:

  • Fuel or fuel vapour can leak from a fuel tank into an adjacent area, and the accumulated fuel can become hazardous, causing ignition.

 – Fuel leaks from the wing and trim tanks go either to the leading or trailing edge cavities or to the outside.

 – Any fuel overflowing from the NACA intake is directed downwards and away from the engines (heat source) via a fuel leak drip strip (angle section) located onboard of the NACA intake.

 – The equipment is explosion-proofed and insulated from leakage in the leading and trailing edges.

 – The APU fuel feed and Trim Tank transfer pipes at the rear fuselage are shrouded so any fuel leakage is drained overboard via the drain mast.

Heat Sources:

  • Wing leading edges contain hot air ducting from the engines to the bleed air and anti-icing systems.

 – These pipes are insulated and separated from the tank boundary.

Next Steps

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Sofema Aviation Services www.sassofia.com and Sofema Online www.sofemaonline.com provide Fuel Tank Safety & Fuel Tank Entry classroom webinar and online training. Please see the websites or email team@sassofia.com for comments or questions.

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Fuel Tank Safety, SAS blogs, CDCCL - Critical Design Configuration Control Limitations, Critical Design Configuration Control Limitations, Fuel Quantity Indicating, Valves, Pressure Switches, Heat Sources, Wing Structure, Tank Structure