객실 기압 (Cabin Pressure) (Cabin Pressure)
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Definition
순항 고도에서 승객의 쾌적함을 유지하기 위해 항공기 동체 내부에서 조절되는 기압.
What Is Cabin Pressure?
Cabin pressure refers to the regulated atmospheric pressure maintained inside the pressurized fuselage of a commercial aircraft during flight. Because atmospheric pressure drops dramatically with altitude — at 35,000 feet, outside pressure is only about 26% of sea-level pressure, insufficient for human survival — the fuselage is sealed and pressurized to maintain a cabin altitude typically equivalent to 6,000–8,000 feet above sea level. This is comfortable enough for healthy adults while placing manageable stress on the airframe structure.
How Cabin Pressurization Works
On most commercial jet aircraft, cabin pressure is maintained using bleed air — compressed air extracted from the intermediate or high-pressure stages of the turbofan engines. This hot, high-pressure air is conditioned (cooled and filtered) by air conditioning packs and then delivered into the cabin. The pressure is regulated by outflow valves at the rear of the fuselage that continuously release a controlled amount of air, balancing the incoming bleed air supply to maintain a precise cabin altitude target.
The pressure differential between cabin interior and outside atmosphere is approximately 8.0–8.9 psi on most wide-body jets at cruise altitude. This differential creates an enormous net force on the fuselage structure — a Boeing 747 fuselage at 8.5 psi differential is under a net outward force of roughly 500 tons across its entire surface area. The fuselage structure and skin must withstand this load through thousands of flight cycles, making pressurization fatigue one of the dominant design drivers in commercial airframe engineering.
Boeing 787 Innovation
The Boeing 787 Dreamliner introduced a significant advance: its all-electric architecture eliminates engine bleed air for pressurization, instead using electrically driven compressors. This allows the 787 to maintain a cabin altitude equivalent to only 6,000 feet (versus the traditional 8,000 feet on bleed-air systems). The lower cabin altitude reduces passenger dehydration and fatigue, as the slightly higher oxygen partial pressure and higher humidity (787 maintains 15% cabin humidity versus 5–10% on conventional aircraft) measurably improve how passengers feel on arrival.
Notable Examples
The Airbus A380 maintains a cabin altitude of 6,000 feet at its typical cruise altitude of FL430 (43,000 feet), with a maximum differential pressure of 9.0 psi — among the highest in commercial aviation, enabled by the aircraft's composite and aluminum hybrid fuselage. In contrast, older aircraft like the Boeing 737-200 were limited to maximum differential pressures of 7.5 psi, resulting in cabin altitudes of up to 9,000 feet on some routes, noticeably more fatiguing for passengers and crew. In the event of pressurization failure, oxygen masks drop from the panel above each seat and the flight crew initiates an emergency descent to below 10,000 feet — the safe altitude where passengers can breathe unaided.
Related Components
Cabin pressure interacts directly with air recirculation — the two systems work together to maintain temperature, humidity, and pressure simultaneously. The APU can maintain cabin pressurization on the ground via its own bleed air output when the main engines are not running, allowing aircraft to be pre-conditioned before passenger boarding. The galley water system operates under the same pressurized environment, and the lavatory waste system uses differential pressure to power its vacuum flush mechanism.
Related Terms
공기 재순환 (Air Recirculation)
객실 공기의 일부를 필터링하고 재활용하여 신선한 블리드 공기 또는 압축 공기와 혼합하는 객실 시스템.
보조 동력 장치 (APU)
주 엔진이 꺼져 있을 때 전력과 에어컨을 공급하는 꼬리 부분의 소형 엔진.
환경 제어 시스템 (ECS)
승객과 승무원의 편의·안전을 위해 엔진 블리드 공기나 전기 압축 공기를 조정하여 객실 온도, 압력, 공기질을 유지하는 통합 시스템.
동체 (Fuselage)
승객, 화물, 승무원을 수용하는 항공기의 주요 몸체.
화장실 (Lavatory)
고도에서 진공 플러시 폐수 시스템을 사용하는 항공기 화장실 시설.