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Texas Instruments - Addressing New Challenges in Urban Air Mobility

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C h a p t e r 4 ELECTRICAL ISOLATION: CRITICAL TO HUMAN AND EQUIPMENT SAFETY UAM vehicles require a massive amount of electrical power, especially on takeoff when power output surges into the 200kW range. This works out to 250A of current draw with an 800V battery. At the same time, low-voltage components are tasked with transferring an enormous amount of data throughout the aircraft without error. Given the safety-critical nature of these systems working seamlessly together, plus the fact that human passengers must never come in direct contact with high voltages, electrical isolation is extremely important in UAM vehicles. System designers must also consider that if an isolation failure does occur, it may not affect just one other component, but instead cause a cascading fault that propagates through multiple safety- critical systems which are otherwise redundant. Cabling isolation is well understood— thicker insulation allows for higher voltages—but working with components that run on hundreds of volts in parallel with devices that require single-digit operating voltages can be a challenge. Burak Yüksel Aircraft Systems Architect, Volocopter GmbH Electric air vehicles operating in an urban environment is a reality of this decade. We have the means and we have the technology. Thanks to working closely with safety authorities they will become daily used products, and they will have more performance and functions in time." 18 Addressing New Challenges in Urban Air Mobility

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