On the Potential of Extending Aircraft Service Time Using a Fatigue Damage Index
Simon Pfingstl, Dominik Steinweg, Markus Zimmermann, Mirko Hornung

TL;DR
This paper introduces a fatigue damage index-based criterion for aircraft retirement, allowing personalized service life extension by accounting for individual operational stresses, supported by analysis of Airbus A320 fleet data.
Contribution
It proposes a novel fatigue damage index criterion for aircraft decommissioning, enabling personalized and potentially extended service lives based on operational data.
Findings
Significant extension of average aircraft service life using FDI-based criterion.
Seat load factors and cruise altitudes strongly influence FDI.
Taxi times have minor impact on FDI.
Abstract
Aircraft structures experience various kinds of loads over their entire lifetime, typically leading to fatigue and ultimately structural failure. In order to avoid structural failure during operation, the maximum number of flight cycles and flight hours is regulated by laws ensuring continued airworthiness. However, since every flight impacts the aircraft differently, not all airframes are equally stressed at the time of decommissioning. This paper proposes a new retirement criterion based on the so-called fatigue damage index (FDI). The criterion takes into account that aircraft are differently operated and thus enables an individual decommissioning of aircraft without compromising its safety. Based on aircraft sample data covering 95% of the Airbus A320 fleet over two years, the enhanced decommissioning criterion is estimated to significantly extend the average aircraft service life.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphite, nuclear technology, radiation studies · Risk and Safety Analysis · Fatigue and fracture mechanics
