Effect of Aeroelastic Tailoring of Composite Wing Skin Laminates on Controllability of Aircraft

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Varakini Sanmugadas ◽  
Rikin Gupta ◽  
Wei Zhao ◽  
Rakesh K. Kapania ◽  
David K. Schmidt
2013 ◽  
Vol 464 ◽  
pp. 110-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nur Azam Abdullah ◽  
Erwin Sulaeman

This paper presents aeroelastic tailoring optimization of a swept back supersonic wing with external stores using composite structure material for the wing skin. The analysis has been conducted to calculate the flutter speeds at several altitudes ranging from a negative altitude of-7,943 ft until 30000 ft. MSC Nastran software is used to determine the flutter speed. The objective is to get the lowest possible wing weight by varying the wing skin composite fly angle and thickness as the optimization variables and by considering flutter speed as the optimization constraint. The constraint is imposed such that the flutter speed should be similar or higher than flutter speed of a previously investigated supersonic wing having similar planform but using aluminum as wing skin. The use of composite suggested that each composite layer thickness and fiber angle can be manipulated to achieve the target. The present results indicate that the weight of the composite wing skin can be reduced by 70 % compared to the aluminum wing skin while retaining similar or better flutter speed boundary envelope.


2013 ◽  
Vol 401-403 ◽  
pp. 571-577
Author(s):  
Peng Jin ◽  
Bi Feng Song ◽  
Xiao Ping Zhong

An optimization method for blended composite panels with aeroelastic constraint is presented in this paper. On the basis of composite panel sub-region division, the lamination parameters of a guide laminate and length indicator of each ply of the guide laminate are introduced as design variables using parallel genetic algorithm (GA) for optimization. For each individual, the inverse problem of obtaining laminate configuration to target the lamination parameters is solved by another GA. The method of defining design variables can reduce the number of design variables obviously compared with previous work. And the numerical results indicate that the present method is capable of producing fully blended designs of composite wing with aeroelastic performance improvement and weight reduction.


2018 ◽  
Vol 122 (1255) ◽  
pp. 1442-1474 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eduardo P. Krupa ◽  
Jonathan E. Cooper ◽  
Alberto Pirrera ◽  
Raj Nangia

ABSTRACTThis paper investigates the synergies and trade-offs between passive aeroelastic tailoring and adaptive aeroelastic deformation of a transport composite wing for fuel burn minimisation. This goal is achieved by optimising thickness and stiffness distributions of constitutive laminates, jig-twist shape and distributed control surface deflections through different segments of a nominal “cruise-climb” mission. Enhanced aerostructural efficiency is sought both passively and adaptively as a means of aerodynamic load redistribution, which, in turn, is used for manoeuvre load relief and minimum drag dissipation. Passive shape adaptation is obtained by embedding shear-extension and bend-twist couplings in the laminated wing skins. Adaptive camber changes are provided via full-span trailing-edge flaps. Optimised design solutions are found using a bi-level approach that integrates gradient-based and particle swarm optimisations in order to tailor structural properties at rib-bay level and retrieve blended stacking sequences. Performance benefits from the combination of passive aeroelastic tailoring with adaptive control devices are benchmarked in terms of fuel burn and a payload-range efficiency. It is shown that the aeroservoelastically tailored composite design allows for significant weight and fuel burn improvements when compared to a similar all-metallic wing. Additionally, the trailing-edge flap augmentation can extend the aircraft performance envelope and improve the overall cruise span efficiency to nearly optimal lift distributions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 145 ◽  
pp. 186-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik M. Mueller ◽  
Stephen Starnes ◽  
Nancy Strickland ◽  
Paul Kenny ◽  
Chris Williams

2014 ◽  
Vol 22 (12) ◽  
pp. 3272-3279
Author(s):  
丁玲 DING Ling ◽  
孙辉 SUN Hui ◽  
贾宏光 JIA Hong-guang ◽  
杨洪波 YANG Hong-bo

2011 ◽  
Vol 213 ◽  
pp. 334-338
Author(s):  
Jiang Xie ◽  
Zhi Chun Yang ◽  
Shi Jun Guo

This paper investigates aeroelastic tailoring and optimal trailing edge control surface deflection to minimize induced drag for a HALE UAV flying wing configuration. The analysis process is conducted on the Finite Element(FE) model of a composite slender wing. Genetic Algorithm(GA) is employed to aeroelastically tailor the wing by setting the composite ply orientation. The study examined conformal and traditional flaps and explored two optimization formulations to minimize drag. The impacts of the conformal control surface are recognized as required deflection saving which can be translated to drag reduction. The results also show that the control demands for the optimal trim can be further reduced if the wing is properly tailored.


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