CORDIS · 824310 · H2020

ICE GENESIS Creating the next generation of 3D simulation means for icing

Coordinator: AIRBUS OPERATIONS SAS (FR)

Current design methodologies used to characterise ice accretion and its effects on air vehiclecomponents and power plant systems are mainly based on empirical methods, comparative analysis,2D simulation tools and past experience gained on in-service products. Due to the associateduncertainties, cautious design margins are used, leading to conservative and non-optimised solutions.As future air vehicle and propulsive system architectures introduce radical design changes, it willno longer be possible to rely on the existing design methodologies, making future developmentextremely difficult to ac…

EU contribution
€12.0M
Total cost
Period
2019-01-01 → 2023-12-31
Framework
Horizon 2020 (2014–2020)
Funding scheme
RIA
Call
H2020-MG-2018-2019-2020
Status
CLOSED

About Horizon 2020 (2014–2020)

Horizon 2020 was the EU's flagship research and innovation programme for 2014–2020, with a budget of around €77 billion. It bundled FP7's strands with the EIT and the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme, introduced a stronger societal-challenge orientation, and pushed the funding logic toward closer-to-market innovation. New calls closed in 2020 but funded projects continued through 2024.

EU contribution: €12.0M awarded to the consortium. The project runs over approximately 5 years from 2019-01-01 to 2023-12-31.

Full record on CORDIS — partners, deliverables, publications, news.

Open on cordis.europa.eu → Grant DOI ↗

Frequently asked questions

Who funds this research project?
This project is funded by the European Union through the Horizon 2020 (2014–2020) programme, under the RIA funding scheme.
What is the EU contribution?
The European Commission contributes €12.0M.
Which EU programme funds it?
The project is funded under Horizon 2020 (2014–2020), call H2020-MG-2018-2019-2020.
Who coordinates the project?
The project is coordinated by AIRBUS OPERATIONS SAS (FR).
What is the project timeline?
The project runs from 2019-01-01 to 2023-12-31 — approximately 5 years.
Where can I find the full project record?
The complete record — partners, deliverables, publications and news — is published on CORDIS under project ID 824310.