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Article
Publication date: 7 January 2022

Syam Narayanan S. and Asad Ahmed R.

The purpose of this study is to experimentally analyse the effect of flexible and stiffened membrane wings in the lift generation of flapping micro air vehicle (MAV).

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to experimentally analyse the effect of flexible and stiffened membrane wings in the lift generation of flapping micro air vehicle (MAV).

Design/methodology/approach

This is analysed by the rectangle wing made up of polyethylene terephthalate sheets of 100 microns. MAV is tested for the free stream velocity of 2 m/s, 4 m/s, 6 m/s and k* of 0, 0.25, 1, 3, 8. This test is repeated for flapping MAV of the free flapping frequency of 2 Hz, 4 Hz, 6 Hz, 10 Hz and 12 Hz.

Findings

This study shows that the membrane wing with proper stiffeners can give better lift generation capacity than a flexible wing.

Research limitations/implications

Only a normal force component is measured, which is perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the model.

Practical implications

In MAVs, the wing structures are thin and light, so the effect of fluid-structure interactions is important at low Reynold’s numbers. This data are useful for the MAV developments.

Originality/value

The effect of chord-wise flexibility in lift generation is the study of the effect of a flexible wing and rigid wing in MAV. It is analysed by the rectangle wing. The coefficient of normal force at different free stream conditions was analysed.

Details

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, vol. 94 no. 5
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1748-8842

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 1 April 1947

Under this heading are published regularly abstracts of all Reports and Memoranda of the Aeronautical Research Council, Reports and Technical Notes of the United States National…

Abstract

Under this heading are published regularly abstracts of all Reports and Memoranda of the Aeronautical Research Council, Reports and Technical Notes of the United States National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics and publications of other similar Research Bodies as issued.

Details

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, vol. 19 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0002-2667

Article
Publication date: 22 November 2011

Markus Kintscher, Martin Wiedemann, Hans Peter Monner, Olaf Heintze and Timo Kühn

The purpose of this paper is to describe the pre‐design and sizing of a smart leading edge section which is developed in the project SADE (Smart High Lift Devices for Next…

1231

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to describe the pre‐design and sizing of a smart leading edge section which is developed in the project SADE (Smart High Lift Devices for Next Generation Wings), which is part of the seventh framework program of the EU.

Design/methodology/approach

The development of morphing technologies in SADE concentrates on the leading and trailing edge high‐lift devices. At the leading edge a smart gap and step‐less droop nose device is developed. For the landing flap a smart trailing edge of the flap is in the focus of the research activities. The main path in SADE follows the development of the leading edge section and the subsequent wind tunnel testing of a five meter span full‐scale section with a chord length of three meters in the wind tunnel T‐101 at the Russian central aero‐hydrodynamic institute (TsAGI) in Moscow.

Findings

The presented paper gives an overview over the desired performance and requirements of a smart leading edge device, its aerodynamic design for the wind tunnel tests and the structural pre‐design and sizing of the full‐scale leading edge section which will be tested in the wind tunnel.

Originality/value

SADE aims at a major step forward in the development and evaluation of the potential of morphing airframe technologies.

Details

International Journal of Structural Integrity, vol. 2 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1757-9864

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 5 January 2015

Luca Riccobene and Sergio Ricci

The purpose of this paper is to present a formulation that couples equivalent plate and beam models for aircraft structures analysis, suitable in conceptual design in which fast…

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to present a formulation that couples equivalent plate and beam models for aircraft structures analysis, suitable in conceptual design in which fast model generation and efficient analysis capability are required.

Design/methodology/approach

Assembling the complete model with common techniques such as Lagrange multipliers or penalty function method would require a solver capable of handling the combined set of linear equation. The alternative approach proposed here is based on a static reduction of the beam model at specified connection points and the subsequent “embedding” into the equivalent plate model using a coordinate transformation, translating physical dfs in Ritz coordinates, i.e. polynomial coefficients. Displacements and forces on beam elements are recovered with the inverse transformation once the solution is computed.

Findings

An aeroelastic trim analysis on a Transonic CRuiser (TCR) civil aircraft conceptual model validates the hybrid model: as the TCR features a slender flexible fuselage and a wide root chord wing, the capability to reduce the beam model for the fuselage at more than one connection point improved aeroelastic corrections to steady longitudinal aerodynamic derivatives.

Originality/value

Although the equivalent model proposed is simpler than others found in literature, it offers automatic mesh generation capabilities, and it is fully integrated into an aeroelastic framework. The hybrid model represents an enhancement allowing both dynamical and static analyses.

Details

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology: An International Journal, vol. 87 no. 1
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0002-2667

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 1 April 1967

Under this heading are published regularly abstracts of Reports and Memoranda of the Aeronautical Research Council and publications of other similar Research Bodies as issued.

Abstract

Under this heading are published regularly abstracts of Reports and Memoranda of the Aeronautical Research Council and publications of other similar Research Bodies as issued.

Details

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, vol. 39 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0002-2667

Article
Publication date: 31 August 2022

Mostafa Arasteh, Yegane Azargoon and M.H. Djavareshkian

Ground effect is one of the important factors in the enhancement of wing aerodynamic performance. This study aims to investigate the aerodynamic forces and performance of a…

Abstract

Purpose

Ground effect is one of the important factors in the enhancement of wing aerodynamic performance. This study aims to investigate the aerodynamic forces and performance of a flapping wing with the bending deflection angel under the ground effect.

Design/methodology/approach

In this study, the wing and flapping mechanism were designed and manufactured based on the seagull flight and then assembled. It is worth noting that this mechanism is capable of wing bending in the upstroke flight as big birds. Finally, the model was examined at bending deflection angles of 0° and 107° and different distances from the surface, flapping frequencies and velocities in forward flight in a wind tunnel.

Findings

The results revealed that the aerodynamic performance of flapping wings in forward flight improved due to the ground effect. The effect of the bending deflection mechanism on lift generation was escalated when the flapping wing was close to the surface, where the maximum power loading occurred.

Practical implications

Flapping wings have many different applications, such as maintenance, traffic control, pollution monitoring, meteorology and high-risk operations. Unlike fixed-wing micro aerial vehicles, flapping wings are capable of operating in very-low Reynolds-number flow regimes. On the other hand, ground effect poses positive impacts on the provision of aerodynamic forces in the take-off process.

Originality/value

Bending deflection in the flapping motion and ground effect are two influential factors in the enhancement of the aerodynamic performance of flapping wings. The combined effects of these two factors have not been studied yet, which is addressed in this study.

Details

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, vol. 95 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1748-8842

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 2 October 2017

Miguel Castillo Acero

The purpose of this paper is to present the studies to develop structural highly orthotropic panels. These types of panels provide the capabilities required for structural…

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to present the studies to develop structural highly orthotropic panels. These types of panels provide the capabilities required for structural morphing. They are highly deformable in one given direction; and in the perpendicular direction, one must be compliant to sustain the internal loads per certification stiffness and strength requirements.

Design/methodology/approach

Neither classic orthotropic panels nor regular cellular solids Bloch wave theories are strictly applicable on their study. A combination of computational method, MATLAB-coded, to analyze stability and classic structural beam theory is studied. Then, non-linear finite element method models are developed for an aerospace control surface application; their results are compared with reported Bloch wave sequences on periodic cellular solid panels.

Findings

The stability along stiffer direction is a requirement to obtain a continuous deformation and plasticization sequence of the cell rows in the perpendicular direction. A sample panel is sized and 3D modeled, and then produced using additive layer manufacturing process to demonstrate the initial stages of a validation and verification campaign.

Originality/value

This paper provides a new method to mechanical characterize highly orthotropic panels.

Details

International Journal of Structural Integrity, vol. 8 no. 5
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1757-9864

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 1 March 1954

E.G. MA Broadbent and A.F.R.Ae.S.

THE primary duties of an aircraft design team are to design an aircraft capable of meeting a certain specification of performance and manoeuvrability with suitable flying…

Abstract

THE primary duties of an aircraft design team are to design an aircraft capable of meeting a certain specification of performance and manoeuvrability with suitable flying qualities, and to ensure that it will be strong enough to withstand any aerodynamic loads it may suffer in flight. It will be found that the aircraft when built is not a rigid structure, but this in itself is not important. We are all familiar with the flexing of an aircraft's wings when struck by a sharp gust of wind in flight, but as long as the wings are strong enough no harm is done. On the contrary, in a passenger aircraft the flexibility of the wings in bending will have a favourable effect, as it will cushion the passengers to some extent from the suddenness of the gust. Flexibility of the structure, however, is not always beneficial and it often introduces new difficulties in the designer's problems. These difficulties arise when the deformation of the aircraft structure introduces additional aerodynamic forces of appreciable magnitude. The additional forces will themselves cause deformation of the structure which may introduce still further aerodynamic forces, and so on. It is interactions of this type between elastic and aerodynamic forces which lead to the oscillatory phenomenon of flutter, and to the non‐oscillatory phenomena of divergence and reversal of control. The study of these three aero‐elastic problems becomes more important as aircraft speeds increase, because increase of design speeds leads to more slender aircraft with thinner wings, and therefore to relatively greater flexibility of the structure. The dangers, in fact, are such that the designers of a modern high‐performance aircraft have to spend considerable effort on the prediction of aero‐elastic effects in order that suitable safeguards can be included in the design. By far the greatest part of this effort is spent on flutter, which will be discussed in Parts II, III and IV of this series, but any of the three problems may force the designers to increase the structural stiffness of parts of the aircraft. The wing skin thickness on a modern aircraft, for example, is nearly always designed by consideration either of aileron reversal or wing flutter. Divergence is usually less important but as it is the simplest of the three phenomena to treat analytically, we shall study it first.

Details

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, vol. 26 no. 3
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0002-2667

Article
Publication date: 1 April 1954

E.G. Broadbent

IN Part I wc saw how structural flexibility could introduce aerodynamic forces which might eventually lead to instability, or to the complete nullification of a desired…

Abstract

IN Part I wc saw how structural flexibility could introduce aerodynamic forces which might eventually lead to instability, or to the complete nullification of a desired aerodynamic effect. The phenomenon of flutter presents another problem in stability, but in this case an oscillatory instability is threatened. It must be realized at the outset that flutter is no mere resonance phenomenon such as the bad vibrations a motor‐car may exhibit at a particular engine speed. Flutter is a vibration in which energy is extracted from the airstrcam to help build up the amplitude, and a catastrophic failure can easily occur within a second of the start of the flutter.

Details

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, vol. 26 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0002-2667

Article
Publication date: 1 February 2003

A. Kaveh and G.R. Roosta

An improvement is presented for the existing minimal cycle basis selection algorithms increasing their efficiency. This consists of reducing the number of cycles to be considered…

Abstract

An improvement is presented for the existing minimal cycle basis selection algorithms increasing their efficiency. This consists of reducing the number of cycles to be considered as candidates for being the elements of a minimal cycle basis and makes practical use of the Greedy algorithm feasible. A modification is also included to form suboptimal‐minimal cycle bases in place of minimal bases. An efficient algorithm is developed to form suboptimal cycle bases of graphs, in which the Greedy algorithm is applied twice. First a suboptimal minimal cycle basis is formed, and then ignoring the minimality, a basis with elements having smaller overlaps is selected.

Details

Engineering Computations, vol. 20 no. 1
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0264-4401

Keywords

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