SUBSAFE Electrical Hull Penetrator Connectors for Directed Energy (DE) Weapon Systems
Navy SBIR 2020.1 - Topic N201-063 NAVSEA - Mr. Dean Putnam - [email protected] Opens: January 14, 2020 - Closes: February 26, 2020 (8:00 PM ET)
TECHNOLOGY
AREA(S): Electronics ACQUISITION
PROGRAM: NAVSEA 073, Advanced Submarine Systems Development OBJECTIVE:
Develop submarine SUBSAFE electrical hull penetrators and connectors that can
transfer high currents or high voltages in the order of 100�s of kW through the
submarine's pressure hull. DESCRIPTION:
The Navy seeks technologies for transmitting high electrical power required for
operating Directed Energy (DE) weapon systems from inboard the submarine to an
outboard DE system, submersible platform, special operation, etc. The
technology must address the capability to transfer high electrical power safely
from inboard submarine to a DE subsystem or beam director located on an
outboard platform through the hull-penetrating path. In the case of all
electrical hull penetrators, the solution needs to address high-power
electrical cables and appropriate connectors that can carry high electrical
power (greater than 500kW of electrical power) over long distances (greater
than 30 ft.) with low ohmic or impedance loss. The electrical cable shall also
include additional shielding to minimize EMI. Consideration must be given to
the overall system approach and operational aspects of the systems. Ideally, DE
systems would require hull penetrations for the high electrical power required
for operating a High Energy Laser (HEL) subsystem and low electrical power
required for operating a beam director or other auxiliary subsystems within a
DE system. The guideline for total electrical power is approximately 300 kW
with potential roadmap to greater than 500 kW potential growth. PHASE I:
Develop a concept for a hull penetrator to transmit kW class of electrical
power from the inboard DE system to an outboard HEL subsystem or high energy DE
to beam director system. Ensure that the concept includes electrical feed
technology in the marine environment that provide realistic energy levels from
300 kW to 600 kW electrical energy required in order to operate an
approximately 100 kW to 200kW class outboard high energy HEL system with
>30% electrical to optical efficiency. Ensure that the hull penetrator
design meets Navy SUBSAFE qualification requirements and uses Model Base
Engineering (MBE) approach. Demonstrate feasibility by some combination of
analysis, modelling and simulation. The Phase I Option, if exercised, will
include the initial design specifications and capabilities in preparation for
prototype development and demonstration in Phase II. PHASE II:
Design and develop a lab prototype that incorporates power-transmitting
capability from inboard to outboard Navy systems and can be tested in a
representative undersea environment.� Include in the design the maintainability
and workability of the Hull Penetrator Insert under a marine environment.
Conduct a demonstration of the design and a verification test at a Navy
facility to verify that key system performance specifications are met. Outline
the plan to fabricate an initial field prototype system using model base
engineering (MBE) that can be easily integrated and tested on a representative
submarine environment. Develop a Phase III plan. PHASE III
DUAL USE APPLICATIONS: In Phase III, the company support the Navy or DoD
contractor in transitioning the technology for manufacturing of Electrical
insert for Hull Penetrator. REFERENCES: 1. �Military
Specification for Connectors, Electrical, Deep Submergence, Submarine
(MIL-C-24217).� http://everyspec.com/MIL-SPECS/MIL-SPECS-MIL-C/MIL-C-24217A_49807 2. Warwick,
Graham. �General Atomic: Third-Gen Electric Laser Weapon Now Ready.�� Aviation
Week & Space Technology, Apr 20, 2015. https://aviationweek.com/technology/general-atomics-third-gen-electric-laser-weapon-now-ready 3. �Harsh
Environment Connectivity, with Military-Grade Custom Interconnects, Sensors,
Shipboard Lighting, and Electrical Panels.� L.L. Rowe. http://seaconworldwide.com/wp-content/uploads/L.L.Rowe_.pdf 4. Jenkins,
Dave, Miller, Richard and Desjardin, Greg. �Creative Adaptation of Interconnect
Technology Across Industry Boundaries.�� OCEANS 2015 - MTS/IEEE Washington,
19-22 Oct. 2015. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7404625 KEYWORDS:
Submarine Systems; Hull Penetrator; High Energy Laser (HEL); Submarine Safety;
SUBSAFE; Universal Modular Mass (UMM); Model Base Engineering (MBE)
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