4.7 Article

Effects of Static Stability Margin on Aerodynamic Design Optimization of Truss-Braced Wing Aircraft

Journal

AEROSPACE
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/aerospace10070603

Keywords

truss-braced wing aircraft; aerodynamic design optimization; relaxed static stability; aerodynamic efficiency; drag reduction

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Currently, the aviation industry is facing an oil and energy crisis, and aircraft design approaches such as aerodynamic shape optimization and active control technology have been effective in reducing fuel burn, noise, and emissions. However, the design problems of relaxed static stability (RSS) and truss-braced wing (TBW) configurations are often studied separately, and the combination of exploration and refined design is rarely presented. This study aims to evaluate the benefits of RSS on a full TBW wing-body-tail configuration and explore the potential by combining shape optimization and RSS.
Currently, the aviation industry is facing an oil and energy crisis and is contributing much more greenhouse gas emissions to the environment. Aircraft design approaches, such as aerodynamic shape optimization, new configuration concepts, and active control technology, have been the primary and effective means of achieving goals concerning fuel burn, noise, and emissions. For now, the design problems of relaxed static stability (RSS, an active control technique) and truss-braced wing (TBW) configurations with high-fidelity aerodynamic shape optimization methods have been investigated widely to promote aerodynamic performance. Nevertheless, they are studied almost always separately, and the combination of exploration and refined design is rarely presented. Therefore, the purposes of this work are to evaluate the benefits of RSS on a full TBW wing-body-tail configuration under various flight conditions and the effects on multi-components and to further explore the potential and analyze the aerodynamic features with the combination of shape optimization and RSS. To address these issues, on the one hand, a range of seven static stability margins are adopted to evaluate its effects with a high-fidelity Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes solver. On the other hand, seven cases of drag minimization multipoint aerodynamic design optimization are performed, which are with 600 shape variables and 13 twist variables, subject to lift coefficient, trim, and thickness constraints. The results indicate that with RSS only, the initial configuration has a 2.39% drag reduction under cruise conditions and a 3.01% and a 5.24% drag reduction under two off-design conditions. Additionally, the effects on the multi-components are observed and analyzed. Moreover, all of the optimized configurations with RSS have 2.13%, 2.42%, and 2.12% drag reductions under cruise conditions, drag divergence conditions, and near-buffet-onset conditions, respectively. The most promising optimized configuration has a lift-to-drag ratio of 24.48 with an aerodynamic efficiency of 17.14. The evaluations with a series of off-design points also present high-level aerodynamic efficiency.

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