Collins Aerospace will bring its new multifunctional SpaceChiller thermoelectric aircraft cooling system to the business aviation market, the company told AIN this week. SpaceChiller was introduced to the airline market earlier this month at Hamburgâs Aircraft Interiors Exposition, where it won the Crystal Cabin Award in the passenger comfort category.
Modular, compact, lightweight, and requiring no refrigerant, SpaceChillerâs âbreakthroughâ heat exchange technology is well suited for use in aircraft cabins, âparticularly for smaller aircraft,â said Brian St. Rock, the engineering director for Collins interiorsâ advanced technology organization. SpaceChiller can provide âcompact and convenient chilling capacity to areas where it was previously limited, or couldnât be chilled at all.â Possible near-term cabin applications include in-seat mini bars, chilled snack bars, âand also providing enhanced thermal comfort for VIP customers.â
Derived from advanced avionics cooling systems Collins developed for military aircraft, individual SpaceChiller units weigh about one pound and measure five inches square and 1.5 inches deep. It can quickly bring items to food-safe temperatures or other settings for proper chilling of items ranging from ice cream to Champagne, St. Rock noted, allowing passengers âinfinite flexibility in terms of dialing in and controlling a thermal environment.â
Collins disclosed no details on discussions with OEMs, but given the maturity of the technology and SpaceChiller, âWe could enter the market with an industrialized product within a year,â St. Rock said.