Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
New Piper Aircraft Jet The following is an example of how Surfaces can be used to analyze an aircraft from little more than a low quality drawing copied from a brochure. The following is for demonstration purposes only and may not represent actual data. What will be Covered… • • • • • • • Why should you care? What is SURFACES? Model Creation Validation Samples Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis Examples of Aerodynamic Loads Examples of Stability and Control Approximate length – 1 hour. Why should you care? • Fast and reliable estimation of aerodynamic properties. • Fast and reliable estimation of stability derivatives. • Fast and reliable estimation of aerodynamic loads. • Fast “what if” evaluation of configurations (T-tail versus Conventional tail versus H-tail versus…). • Ideal for sensitivity studies. • Tailoring of stall progression. • Control effectiveness studies. • and more… What is SURFACES? • Interactive environment that allows the user to design and analyze aircraft geometries. • SURFACES has a multi-document interface. • In SURFACES you do everything in a single program; pre-process, solve, and post-process. • SURACES uses two kind of documents; a Surfaces Worksheet and an Aircraft Datasheet. What is SURFACES? • Interactive environment that allows the user to design and analyze aircraft geometries. • SURFACES has a multi-document interface. • In SURFACES you do everything in a single program; pre-process, solve, and post-process. • SURACES uses two kind of documents; a Surfaces Worksheet and an Aircraft Datasheet. A SURFACES Worksheet is your digital wind tunnel. A SURFACES Aircraft Datasheet is where stability and control and performance analysis takes place. What is SURFACES? Model Details What is SURFACES? Model Details What is SURFACES? Model Details Movable control surfaces Forces and Moments can be applied using equations Movable flaps Flow Solver • • • • • • Three dimensional Vortex-Lattice Method is used to determine the flow field. Models can be symmetric as well as asymmetric. Boundary conditions allow AOA and AOY. Three compressibility models (Prandtl-Glauert, KarmanTsien, Laitone) Three induced drag models (surface integration, standard Cdo+k∙CL², and Prandtl-Betz). Program can take advantage of multiple processors on the motherboard and solve more than one model simultaneously. Validation Sample 1 Pressure distribution over a flat plate. CP versus Chord Station for a Flat Plate 5.00 Exact Theory 4.50 Cp from Surfaces, N=2 4.00 Cp from Surfaces, N=5 Cp from Surfaces, N=10 Pressure Coefficient, CP 3.50 Cp from Surfaces, N=15 3.00 2.50 2.00 1.50 1.00 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60 Chordwise Station 0.80 1.00 Validation Sample 9 NACA R-1208 – Comparison to Wind Tunnel Tests Highly swept-back tapered wings are a good test for any code. Validation Sample 9 NACA R-1208 – Results from SURFACES Section Lift Coefficients from NACA R-1208 1.2 1 Cl·C/CL·Cmean 0.8 NACA R-1208 DATA at 4.7° SURFACES RESULTS at 4.7° (16 spanwise panels) SURFACES RESULTS at 4.7° (32 spanwise panels) 0.6 SURFACES RESULTS at 4.7° (64 spanwise panels) 0.4 0.2 0 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 Spanwise station, 2y/b 0.7 0.8 0.9 1 Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis What We Don’t Know about the Piperjet • Airfoils and airfoil properties • Winglet geometry • CG Envelope • FJ44 Thrust properties • Gross Weight / Inertias • Ram drag point location • True Geometry in many areas • Flap definition • Wing washout • Wing dihedral • Aileron and elevator geometry • FAA Design speeds Examples of Stability and Control Angle-of-Attack Derivatives Approach Cruise Vfar field 134 591 Basic lift coefficient CLo 0.8518 0.1277 Lift coefficient CL 1.3242 0.15201 Lift curve slope CLa 5.0388 6.21135 Drag coefficient slope CDa 1.7705 0.11453 FX variation with AOA Cxa 0.0659 0.06183 FZ variation with AOA Cza -5.467 -6.219 CG location Xcg 0.2000 0.2000 Neutral point (Xcg-Cma/CLa) Xneu 0.4936 0.4566 Far field speed Examples of Stability and Control Angle-of-Yaw Derivatives Approach Cruise Vfar field 134 591 Side force derivative Cyb -1.3417 -1.26053 Dihedral Effect Clb -0.1427 -0.15177 Directional Stability Cnb 0.1266 0.14048 Far field speed Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis Stall Progression At S-L, 5000 lbs, 75 KEAS, Flaps UP, no yaw. Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis Compliance with FAR 23.77(c) at Forward CG At S-L, 5500 lbs, CG at 20% MAC, VREF=79 KEAS atrim = 5.37° detrim = -17.3° Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis Compliance with FAR 23.77(c) at Forward CG At S-L, 5500 lbs, CG at 20% MAC, VREF=79 KEAS Minimum section lift coefficient, CL2D = -1.003 Conclusions • SURFACES –Model Creation –Flow Solver –Validation Samples • The Piper Jet –Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis –Examples of Aerodynamic Loads –Examples of Stability and Control The End • Feedback – Questions – Comments Validation Sample 5 Cessna 172 - Comparison to Flight Test results. When compared to 3 other VL codes and the panel code CMARC, SURFACES scores highest when determining stability derivatives. Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis Trim Drag in Cruise At 25000 ft, at 5500 lbs, 350 KTAS, CDo= 0.020, Prandtl-Glauert compressibility CG Location 20% MAC 35% MAC atrim 0.22° 0.13° detrim -1.25° -0.35° CLtrim 0.1520 0.1520 CDtrim 0.0276 0.0273 Drag, lbf 1000 988 Vtrim, KTAS 348 350 Examples of Aerodynamic Load Analysis Shear Diagram at VA At S-L, 6000 lbs, CG at 20% MAC, VA= 152 KEAS Examples of Aerodynamic Load Analysis Moment Diagram at VA At S-L, 6000 lbs, CG at 20% MAC, VA= 152 KEAS Examples of Aerodynamic Load Analysis Torsion Diagram at VA At S-L, 6000 lbs, CG at 20% MAC, VA= 152 KEAS Examples of Aerodynamic Analysis Flow Visualization - Streamlines Sweep Scripts SURFACES can perform sweeps, during which selected parameters can be modified. AOA, AOY, p∙b/(2V), and others can be varied and studied. Points can even be moved during a sweep Sweep Scripts Once a sweep script is completed, are displayed in a tabular format,… Sweep Scripts …or a graph, in which any parameter can be plotted against each other. This allows the user to extract relationships as mathematical expressions. Sweep Scripts From time to time, many sweeps may have to be created. You can set up batch processing, which will handle the processing automatically. This allows the program to be run overnight or over a weekend.