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Critical Design Review

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Presentation on theme: "Critical Design Review"— Presentation transcript:

1 Critical Design Review
AAE451 – Team 3 Project Avatar December 9, 2003 Brian Chesko Brian Hronchek Ted Light Doug Mousseau Brent Robbins Emil Tchilian

2 Aircraft Name Avatar av·a·tar - n <chat, virtual reality> An image representing a user in a multi-user virtual reality. Source: The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing

3 Introduction Walk Around Design Requirements and Objectives Sizing
Propulsion Aerodynamics Dynamics and Controls Structures Performance Cost Summary Questions

4 Aircraft Walk Around Wing Span = 14.4 ft Wing Chord = 2.9 ft
A/C Length = 10 ft T-Tail – NACA 0012 Pusher Internal Pod Tricycle Gear Low wing – Clark Y

5 Design Requirements & Objectives
Maximum weight < 55 lbs Cruise speed > 50 ft/sec Stall speed < 30 ft/sec Climb angle > 5.5° Operating ceiling > 1000 ft Flight time > 30 minutes Payload of 20 lbs in 14”x6”x20” pod Carry pitot-static boom Spending limit < $300 T.O. distance < 106 ft (~60% of McAllister Park runway length) Rough field capabilities Detachable wing Easy construction

6 Constraint Diagram

7 Propulsion

8 Ref. www.towerhobbies.com
Chosen Engine O.S. Max 1.60 FX-FI RPM 1,800-9,000 RPM 2.08 lbs Fuel Injected Ref.

9 Chosen Propeller 4-blades
Zinger 16X7 Wood Pusher Propeller 16 inches in diameter with 7 inch pitch 4 blades Ref.

10 Ref. www.towerhobbies.com
Chosen Fuel Tank Fuel tank chosen is: Du-Bro 50 oz. fuel tank Available from Tower Hobbies Located at the C.G. of aircraft Good for up to 32 min. of flight time (when completely full). Ref.

11 Takeoff EOM Integration
Thrust Drag + Rolling Friction Position [ft] Velocity [ft/s] Velocity vs. Position at Takeoff Takeoff Distance Within Constraint

12 Max Velocity Maximum Velocity Thrust Thrust/Drag [lbf] Drag
Flying Velocity [ft/s] Thrust/Drag [lbf] Maximum Velocity Thrust Drag

13 Aerodynamics

14 Wing Dimensions Prandtl’s Lifting line theory used for aerodynamic modeling of the lifting components Input parameters: AR, a0, aL=0, a. Lifting Line Model Gives CL, CDi at prescribed a CDvisc found using Xfoil which was used to obtain CD = CDi+CDvisc 5° Dihedral

15 Clark Y Airfoil has low drag over range of interest
Airfoil Selection Region of Interest Clark Y Clark Y Airfoil has low drag over range of interest

16 Airfoil Selection Section Drag Coefficient Cd
Section Lift Coefficient Cl Section Drag Coefficient Cd Angle of Attack (AOA) Section Lift Coefficient Cl

17 Wing Stall Performance
CL needed = 1.19 Wing without flaps reaches CL at a=13° Wing stall possible Wing with 15° flap deflection reaches CL at 11° Required CL CL Angle of Attack (degrees) Flaperons necessary to meet stall requirements

18 Wing Performance Required CL at stall CD CL

19 Drag Build Up At Cruise Component CD Drag Wing 0.018 2.6 lbf Fuselage
0.0045 0.6 lbf Horizontal Tail 0.0043 Vertical Tail 0.0017 0.04 lbf

20 Wing Operating Parameters
CL a (of wing) Flaperon Deflection CD L/D Stall 1.19 11° 15° 0.119 10 T/O 0.989 0.084 12 Cruise 0.44 2.8° 0.018 24

21 Dynamics and Controls

22 Center of Gravity & Aerodynamic Center
Aircraft Center of Gravity is 3.2 ft from nose. Calculated from CAD program Pro-E Aircraft Aerodynamic Center is 3.7 ft from nose. Position where pitching moment of aircraft doesn’t change with angle of attack Calculated using Lift from Wing and Horizontal Tail Aerodynamic Center Center of Gravity

23 Aerodynamic Center of Aircraft
Static Margin Desired Static Margin is 15% - 20% Dependent on C.G. and A.C. location Static Margin is 15% Contributes to Horizontal Tail Sizing Aerodynamic Center of Aircraft Static Margin = 20% Static Margin = 15% Center of Gravity

24 Horizontal Tail Sizing
Tail sized based on desired static margin for static stability and take-off rotation ability  double-dot should be at least 10 deg/sec2 Ref. Roskam, Airplane Flight Dynamics Area 12 ft2 Span 6 ft Chord 2 ft 2 ft 6 ft

25 Vertical Tail Sizing Value of yawing coefficient due to sideslip angle should be approximately = 10e-4 Tail area should be ~2 ft2 Ref. Roskam, Airplane Design Area 2 ft2 Span 1 ft Chord 2 ft 2 ft 1 ft

26 5° dihedral is a good compromise
Dihedral Angle Recommendations Survey of Roskam data on homebuilt & agricultural low-wing aircraft: ~5° “Wing and Tail Dihedral for Models” - McCombs RC w/ailerons (for max maneuverability, low wing): 0-2° EVD (Equivalent V-Dihedral ≈ dihedral) Free Flight Scale model low wing: 3-8° EVD 5° dihedral is a good compromise

27 Control Surface Sizing
Sizes calculate from traditional lifting device percentages. Ref. Roskam, Airplane Design Flaperon Elevator Rudder Chord 0.58 ft 0.6 ft Inboard Position 0.95 ft 0.2 ft 0.1 ft Outboard Position 7.2 ft 3 ft 1 ft 0.6 ft 0.58 ft 0.9 ft 6.25 ft 0.6 ft 2.8 ft

28 Trimming Incidence of Horizontal Tail calculated from trimmed flight during cruise (0 Angle of Attack) Analysis set incidence at -2

29 Structures

30 Wing Spar Design 2 Spar Design (at .15 & .60 chord): Resist Bending
Assuming 5-g loading 53 lbf weight Safety factor of 1.5 Resist Torsion Less than 1o twist at tip under normal flight conditions Spar Results: Material of Choice: Bass or Spruce Wood Front Spar: 3.6” high (based on airfoil) 0.37” thick (0.73” at root) Rear Spar: 3” high (based on airfoil) 0.16” thick (0.25” at root)

31 Longitudinal Beam Design
Resist Bending from: 20 lbf payload Horizontal tail loads Resist Torsion from: Rudder deflections Prop wash over tail Beam Results: Material of Choice: Bass or Spruce Wood Beam Dimensions: 3” high 0.25” thick 8” between the beams

32 Tail Structures Foam core with carbon fiber shell
Horizontal and vertical tails comprised of carbon fiber w/ foam core Possible to make two foam cores, and cure entire tail at one time Control surfaces just need to be cut out of tail structure Tail spars allow attach points and transfer load to beams

33 Rear Gear Design Blue lines represent pin joints
Black tie-downs absorb energy from landing Up to a 33 ft/sec “crash” from 5 feet high Need 18” relaxed length tie-down Square aluminum tube transfers landing load to tie-downs and surrounding structure 1” x 1” x 0.065” thick – 6063-T6

34 Front Gear Design Aluminum Bolt Elastic Band & Nylon Bolt
Provides pivot for gear (does not break) Elastic Band & Nylon Bolt Elastic Band Absorbs some energy from landing Nylon bolt breaks during hard landing Front Gear Aluminum Tube Designed not to break Designed not to bend Al tube: 1” x 1” x 0.065” thick 6063-T6

35 Ref. www.towerhobbies.com
Other Odds and Ends Covering for Wing: Coverite 21st Century Iron on Fabric 0.34 oz/ft2 Stronger, and resists tears better than MonoKote Covering for Fuselage: Fiberglass Either mold or foam core Not conductive – won’t interfere with internal electronics Ref.

36 Final Weight Estimate

37 Performance

38 Aircraft Performance (with 2.2lbf fuel) 90 ft/sec

39 Cost

40 Airframe Cost

41 Electronics Cost

42 Propulsion Cost

43 What Purdue Will Pay For This Project
Total Aircraft Cost What Purdue Will Pay For This Project

44 Total Aircraft Value TOTAL AIRCRAFT VALUE = $106,341.15
Total Aircraft Value = (Engineering Pay) + (Cost) + (Value of Already Possessed Parts) Engineering Pay = hr x $100/hour = $82,375 Aircraft Cost = $13,966.15 Value of Already Possessed Parts = $10,000 Micropilot = $5,000 Carbon Fiber & E-Glass = $5,000 (estimate) TOTAL AIRCRAFT VALUE = $106,341.15 What Purdue Would Pay to Outsource This Project

45 Summary

46 Summary – Internal View
Internal Pod Camera View

47 Summary – 3-View

48 Summary -Major Design Points
Aircraft Description Aspect Ratio = 5 Wing Span = 14.4 ft Wing Area ~ 42 ft2 Aircraft Length = 10 ft (not including air data boom) Engine = 3.7 hp O.S FX-FI – Fuel Injected Weight = 53 lbf Aircraft Configuration T-Tail Low Wing Pusher High Engine Tricycle Gear Internal Pod

49 Questions?

50 References (I) [1] MATLAB. PC Vers Computer Software. Mathworks, INC [2] Raymer, Daniel P., Aircraft Design: A Conceptual Approach, AIAA Education Series, 1989. [3] Roskam, Jan., Airplane Flight Dynamics and Automatic Flight Controls. Part I. DAR Corporation, Kansas [4] Gere, James M., Mechanics of Materials. Brooks/Cole, Pacific Grove, CA. 2001 [5] Tower Hobbies. 9 December [6] XFoil. PC Vers Computer Software. Mark Drela [7] Niu, Michael C., Airframe Structural Design, Conmilit Press Ltd. Hong Kong [8] Halliday, et al., Fundamentals of Physics, John Wiley & Sons. New York [9] Roskam, Jan, Airplane Design (Parts I-VIII), Roskam Aviation and Engineering Corp. Ottawa KS [10] Kuhn, P., “Analysis of 2-Spar Cantilever Wings with Special Reference to Torsion and Load Transference”. NACA Report No. 508. [11] McMaster-Carr. 9 December [12] Pro/ENGINEER. PC Release PTC Corporation. [13] Roskam, Jan., Methods for Estimating Stability and Control Derivatives of Conventional Subsonic Airplanes. Publisher Jan Roskam. Lawrence, KS

51 References (II) [14] Zinger Propeller. 9 December [15] McCombs, William F., “Wing and Tail Dihedral for Models”, Model Aviation. Dec

52 Appendix

53 SIZING

54 Cruise Speed

55 Stall Speed

56 Climb Angle

57 Ceiling

58 Endurance

59 Takeoff

60 Landing Distance

61 PROP

62 Appendix OS 1.60 FX-FI Consistency: The Fuel Injection system constantly supplies the correct air/fuel mixture to the engine, regardless of speed, altitude, or attitude. Recommended is a cc fuel tank that allows approximately 10 to 12 minute flights. = 30 min. with 50 oz. tank.

63 AERO

64 Aerodynamic Modeling Solving Prandt’s equation Substituting:
Prandtl’s Lifting line theory used for aerodynamic modeling of the lifting components Solving Prandt’s equation Substituting: Equation to solve: Main Results CL = πAR*A1*(α- αLo) System of N equations with N unknowns (Solve N  N matix) Take N different spanwise locations on the wing where the equation is to be satisfied: 1, 2, .. N; (but not at the tips, so: 0 <  < ) The wing is symmetrical  A2, A4,… are zero Take only A1, A3,… as unknowns Take only control points on half of the wing: 0 < i  /2

65 Choice of main wing airfoil
From lifting line with Initial parameters: Rectangular planform, 1000 ft a0 = 2pi, αL0 = 0, AR = 5; W/S = 1.28 (from sizing) CL = Cl distribution found at cruise Cl varies :0 to 0.58 Taking into account the Cl variation above, the need of an airfoil with a drag bucket at the specified Cl’s Xfoil utilized for different foils at the above conditions

66 Clark Y Airfoil Drag Bucket location fits best
Airfoil Selection Region of Interest Clark Y Clark Y Airfoil Drag Bucket location fits best

67 ClarkY foil Xfoil runs of ClarkY foil at cruise and take-off
Cruise: αL= -3.5deg Takeoff no flap: αL= -3.8deg Takeoff 10deg flap: αL= -7deg Takeoff 15deg flap: αL= -7.8deg In lifting Line Equation: a0 – updated depending on condition αL - updated according to above

68 Flaperons necessary to meet stall requirements
Stall Performance CL needed = 1.19 Wing without flaps reaches CL at 13 deg aoa Wing stall possible Wing with 15 deg flap deflection reaches CL at 11 degrees Required CL Flaperons necessary to meet stall requirements

69 Stall Performance Drag Calculation
CDtotal = CDinduced+CDvisc CDinduced – from Lifting line CD visc – integrated at the found Cls Required CL CD = at required CL

70 Cruise Performance CL needed = 0.44 CL achieved at 2.8 deg
Total Lift produced = 57lbf Total Drag = 2.6 lbf, L/D =21

71 Operating Parameters Stall 1.19 11 deg 15 deg 0.119 10 T/O 0.989
CL Aoa Flap Deflection CD L/D Stall 1.19 11 deg 15 deg 0.119 10 T/O 0.989 8. deg 0.084 12 Cruise 0.44 2.8 deg 0 deg 0.018 24

72 D & C

73 Center of Gravity Center of Gravity of Aircraft
Weight of Horizontal Tail changes with area Note: 0.44 lbs/ft2 based on aircraft sizing code

74 Aerodynamic Center Aerodynamic Center as a function of Horizontal Tail Area Roskam Eq 11.1 Raymer Fig 16.12

75 Takeoff Rotation Equation
This sizing based on angular acceleration during take-off rotation Ref. Roskam 421 book, pg Variable definitions found in above reference

76 Yaw Moment due to Sideslip
Vertical Tail sized from Coefficient of Yaw Moment due to Sideslip Roskam Eq 11.8 Vol 2 Due to Wing and Fuselage: Roskam Eq 10.42 Vol 6

77 Ref. McCombs, William F. “Wing and Tail Dihedral for Models.”
Dihedral Angle EVD = A + kB A = 0° k = f(x/(b/2)) = 0.98 B = EVD / k ≈ EVD A=0° B X CL Ref. McCombs, William F. “Wing and Tail Dihedral for Models.”

78 Dynamics Short Period Mode Pole -14.391 ± 1.0079i Natural Frequency
(rad/s) Damping Ratio Phugoid Mode Pole ± i Natural Frequency (rad/s) Damping Ratio Dutch Roll Mode Pole ± i Natural Frequency (rad/s) Damping Ratio Spiral Mode Pole Roll Mode Pole Ref. Purdue University AAE565, Matlab Predator Code

79 STRUCTURES

80 What Materials to Use Titanium Bass / Spruce

81 Ref. www.towerhobbies.com
Material Properties Titanium = difficult to obtain Wood = not difficult to obtain Ref Forest Products Laboratory Wood Handbook Ref.

82 Twist Constraint (<1o)
Ref. Kuhn pg. 49 Where T = Torque (in-lbf) L = Length (in) l = f(B0, A0) (ref. Appendix) A0 = f(E, I) (ref. Appendix) B0 = f(G,J) (ref. Appendix) E = Young’s Modulus (psi) I = Moment of Inertia (in4) G = Torsional Stiffness (psi) J = Polar Moment of Inertia (in4) Assumptions: Small Deflections Spars & Ribs Carry all Torsion Span ~ 14.4 ft Chord ~ 2.9 ft Safety Factor = 1.5 G-Loading = 5.0 Weight = 53 lbs Ref. Gere

83 Twist at Tip

84 Twist at Tip (Zoom) Chosen Front Spar = 0.73” thick
Chosen Rear Spar = 0.25” thick (note, this doesn’t include the step)

85 (based on span-wise lift distribution)
Deflection at Tip a (in) L (in) Load (lbf) Ref. Gere pg. 892 Where Load = Weight*SF*G-loading (lbf) L = Length (in) E = Young’s Modulus (psi) I = Moment of Inertia (in4) Assumptions: Small Deflections NO TORSION Span ~ 14.4 ft Chord ~ 2.9 ft Safety Factor = 1.5 G-loading = 5.0 Weight = 53 lbs For this design: a ~ 3 ft or 36 in (based on span-wise lift distribution)

86 Chosen Spar Configuration
Deflection at Tip Chosen Spar Configuration

87 (based on span-wise lift distribution)
Is Stress too High? Load (lbf) Ref. Gere pg. 323 a (in) Where M = Weight*SF*G-loading*a (in-lbf) y = Maximum Dist from Neutral Axis (in) I = Moment of Inertia (in4) L (in) Assumptions: Span ~ 14.4 ft Chord ~ 2.9 ft Safety Factor = 1.5 G-loading = 5.0 Weight = 53 lbs For this design: a = 3 ft or 36 in (based on span-wise lift distribution)

88 Max Tension Stress

89 Max Compression Stress

90 Ref. www.towerhobbies.com
Covering Traditional Monocote may not be strong enough for these large aircraft Coverite 21st Century Iron on Fabric is stronger, and resists tears much better 0.34 oz/ft2 Approx. 2 lbs for entire wing Ref.

91 Summary Main Wing Spruce or Bass wood Front Spar Rear Spar
0.73” thick by 3.6” high Rear Spar 3/8” thick by 3” high h t

92 Rear View of Tail NOTES Torsion can effectively be reduced with appropriate beam spacing Bending can be reduced by increasing moment of inertia of beams (not spacing) Some torsion is inherent, torsion can not be negated as it could in wing Side force from V-stab creates torsion effect on beams Downward force from H-stab creates bending moment on beams

93 Deflection at Tip (Rear of Tail)
Load (lbf) Ref. Gere pg. 892 L (in) Where Load = (lbf) L = Length (in) E = Young’s Modulus (psi) I = Moment of Inertia (in4) Assumptions: Small Deflections Safety Factor = 1.5 G-loading = 3.0 Rectangular Beams Current Known Values: L = 6.2 ft Load ~ 8 lbf Moment of inertia of rectangular beam: I (in4) = (t)(h3)/12 t and h shown on next slide

94 Deflection at Tip (Rear of Tail)
Green = spruce Black = bass h h=2 in t h=3 in

95 Deflection at Tip (Rear of Tail)
Green = spruce Black = bass h h=2 in t h=3 in Required t ~0.55 in

96 Landing Gear Placement (I)
θ = tipback angle = Landing gear placement based on guidelines found in Raymer

97 Landing Gear Placement (II)
γ = overturn angle = Landing gear placement based on guidelines found in Raymer

98 Easily Obtainable Square Tubing
Ref.

99 Buckling of Rear Gear Load L Load For Rear Gear: L ~ 15.3 in
Ref. Gere pg. 763 L Where L = Length (in) E = Young’s Modulus (psi) I = Moment of Inertia (in4) A = Cross Sectional Area (in2) Load Assumptions: Pinned-Pinned Column 1st Mode Buckling No Eccentricity For Rear Gear: L ~ 15.3 in

100 Compressive Failure of Rear Gear
Load L Ref. MIL-HDBK-5H: 3-255 Where Load = (Weight)(S.F.)(Gloading) A = Cross Sectional Area (in2) Load Assumptions: Weight = 53 lbf Gloading = 10 S.F. = 1.5 Aluminum 6061-T6 No Buckling

101 Smallest easily obtainable tubing: 1” x 1” x 0.062”
Stress on Rear Gear Smallest easily obtainable tubing: 1” x 1” x 0.062” t=0.062” t=0.125”

102 Great, what about the bungee?
Consider worst reasonable landing situation Moving at (1.1)Vstall 5 feet above ground Aircraft falls out of the sky Can the bungee absorb the energy associated with this landing?

103 Great, what about the bungee?
Assumptions: Weight = 53 lbf Vstall = 30 ft/sec Altitude = 5 ft Don’t want x to exceed 3 inches (beyond initial stretch) on landing

104 What Spring Constant is Needed?
Required k ~ 3.75 lbf/in 1/k ~ in/lbf

105 What is the Spring Constant?
Relaxed Length ~18 inches

106 How Big is the Bolt? Diameter of nylon bolt = 0.5 in Load Reaction
Ref. Gere pg 900 Load If load = (Weight)(S.F.)(Gloading) = 795 lbf Reaction = 1770 lbf (instantaneous) Need cross sectional area of bolt to be in2 Diameter of nylon bolt = 0.5 in Reaction Assumptions: Weight = 53 lbf Gloading = 10 S.F. = 1.5 3.1” 6.9”

107 PERFORMANCE

108 Endurance Avg. Engine Fuel Consumption = 45.455 mL/min
Endurance = Fuel / Consumptionfuel Avg. Engine Fuel Consumption = mL/min Endurance = 30 min

109 Since this is RC, assume almost instaneous cruise conditions
Range Since this is RC, assume almost instaneous cruise conditions L/D = 19 Cbhp = 1.5 lb/hr/bhp Prop eff = .67 Fuel Frac = 1.043

110 Minimum Flight Velocity
Velocitymin= ft/sec Weight = 53 lbf CLmax = 1.19 q =1.067 lbf/ft^2

111 Rate of Climb Vv= 7.5 ft/sec D = 6.5lbf hpengine = 3.7 hp W = 53 lbf
Prop Eff = .3

112 Maximum Velocity Maximum Velocity Thrust Thrust/Drag [lbf] Drag
Flying Velocity [ft/s] Thrust/Drag [lbf] Maximum Velocity Thrust Drag

113 Climb Angle Vv = 7.5 ft/sec V = 33 ft/sec


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