|
A
UB electronic-packaging researcher is helping the
U.S. Navy to develop a next-generation all-electric
warship that will revolutionize the Navy's use of
weaponry and manpower.
The electric warship's system
architecture to be designed by Cemal Basaran, director
of the Electronic Packaging Laboratory in the School
of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and other researchers
working on the project for the Navy will make available
throughout the entire ship onboard electric power
generated by the ship's power plants and mechanical
propulsion system.
Standard shipboard electrical
systems currently are unable to distribute this immense
electrical power to all parts of the ship, making
impractical the use of advanced weapons and sensors
that require a lot of power, according to the Navy.
Increased power availability
will lead to computerization of most of the electric
warship's operations, which will make manpower redundant.
The electric warship will require a crew of 100, compared
to the traditional battleship crew that numbers in
the thousands, according to Navy estimates.
The Navy plans to have the
electric warship operational by 2012.
Basaran, under a $500,000 Navy
grant, will design next-generation power electronics
capable of carrying high-current density and high
power to all parts of the warship, using nano- and
microelectronics technology. This will be a critical
component of the ship's system architecture, Basaran
says.
"The next-generation power
electronics that will control the ship will lead to
major improvements in effectiveness, survivability
and cost savings, as well as a significant reduction
in the size of the vessel's components," he adds.
Basaran and co-researchers
in the Electronic Packaging Lab are renowned for their
pioneering work in designing and testing micro- and
nanoscale electronic packaging. Their work, already
in use by companies such as Intel, has helped produce
smaller, faster and longer-lasting electronic devices
at much lower cost. They have developed advanced computer
models to simulate and predict electronic packaging
fatigue life and reliability under extremely harsh
service conditions, such as in a Navy warship.
"Our job is to design
and test for the Navy micro- and nanoscale electronic
packages that maintain reliability under extremely
harsh conditions resulting from concurrently acting
vibrations, high-current density, high power and high-temperature
loads," says Basaran, an associate professor
in the Department of Civil, Structural and Environmental
Engineering.
"The state-of-the art
electronic packaging technology cannot handle the
huge electrical power needed by an electric ship's
warfare and civilian components in micron and nanoscale
packages."
The warship's integrated electric
system will reduce significantly size and electrical-power
consumption presently occurring in traditional Navy
ships. By significantly shrinking the size of a ship's
power components, the Navy will free up onboard space
that can be used for other functions, according to
Basaran, a recipient in 1997 of the U.S. Navy Office
of Naval Research Young Investigator Award.
"Right now, most electrical
components are huge and waste too much power, but
they don't need to," Basaran says. "We can
reduce their size and waste by orders of magnitude,
while increasing their ability to handle high current-density
and high-power levels in harsh environments, significantly."
Navy funding and collaborating
funding from the New York State Office of Science,
Technology and Academic Research (NYSTAR) and corporate
grants will fund the work of six doctoral students
on the project, according to Basaran.
© 2004, University at
Buffalo. All rights reserved.
|