Hello nice people!
High voltage lines use aluminium wires: lighter and cheaper than copper at identical resistance. Homes don't because bad contacts created accidents. Even aeroplanes don't, seemingly for that same reason.
But as
aeroplanes care about mass and their future is hybrid or electric, with Zn-air batteries or liquid hydrogen and fuel cells, they strongly
need aluminium wires, and have the means to
develop good contacts.
Bad contacts shall possibly result from more conductive but creeping alloys like AA1350. The cable's end squeezes over time, the contact pressure vanishes, the contact gets bad.
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Plane designers could first check if the
solutions for high voltage lines fit planes.
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I suggested already to solder Ag-coated Al cables in Cu-alloy clips.
scienceforumsSn-Pb solder is reliable, Sn-Pb-Ag is more caring with the Ag layer. But this builds corrosion couples usually forbidden in plane design. So here are proposals using
Al-alloy cable ends, of corrosion-safe alloys like AA5083, AA5457, AA6062, AA3004 and few more.
Electric planes will transmit >2×30MW. Friction stir welding,
FSW can join the massive AA1350 bars on AA5083 ends wikipediaI trust the resulting alloy gradient. Would the method even keep cold-work hardening, welcome at the contact?
Welding is to slow for smaller cables. If soldering, corrosion lets me prefer an Al-base filler. The usual eutectic AlSi13 filler melts at 580°C, excluding parts of much-alloyed Al, especially AA5083 that melts at 580-640°C. Melting at 450°C, the less usual
AlMg38 eutectic might solder AA1350 cables in AA5083 ends. And could a heat sink protect the cold-work hardening at the tip that makes the mechanical contact?
Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy