BAE Gets $12 Million to Make High-Bandwidth Pressure Sensors for Extreme Temperatures

Staff
By Staff
1 Min Read

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has awarded BAE Systems’ FAST Labs research and development organization a $12 million contract as part of the High Operational Temperature Sensors (HOTS) program.

Many critical defense and industrial systems such as hypersonic aircraft and missiles, automotive, jet engine turbine and oil-and-gas systems operate in extreme temperature conditions.

Current sensors have limited performance as they cannot operate in temperatures higher than 225°C. Their capability is limited by the materials that comprise the sensors themselves, the accompanying circuitry (e.g., silicon-based transistor technology) and packaging.

The HOTS program will help develop microelectronic sensor technologies capable of high-bandwidth, high-dynamic-range sensing at extreme temperatures.

Under the terms of the contract, BAE Systems will design and build a new pressure sensor module – consisting of an integrated transducer and signal-conditioning microelectronics – able to operate with high performance at 800°C or 1,472°F.

Work on this program will take place at BAE Systems’ facilities in Nashua, New Hampshire and Merrimack, New Hampshire. It will also include collaboration with subcontractors The Penn State Applied Research Laboratory, Purdue University and Kampanics, LLC, and supplier GE Aerospace’s research center.

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