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AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design II Air Loads Prof. Dr. Serkan Özgen Dept. Aerospace Engineering February 2017
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Page 1: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIAir Loads

Prof. Dr. Serkan Özgen

Dept. Aerospace Engineering

February 2017

Page 2: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Maneuver loads

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Page 3: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Level turn

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• The greatest air loads on an airplane usually come from thegeneration of lift during high-g maneuvers.

𝑛 = 𝐿 𝑊, load factor and 𝑛 =1

𝑐𝑜𝑠𝜙

• The largest load the airplane is expected to encounter is called the limit load and the corresponding load factor is called the limit load factor.

• Ultimate load factor or the design load factor is the limit loadmultiplied by a factor of safety to account for material andworkmanship quality, design errors, uncertainty, etc.

• Factor of safety = 1.5 nultimate=1.5*nlimit.

Page 4: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Typical limit load factors

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Page 5: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Level turn

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• Stall limit for the maximum load factor (instantaneous turn):

𝐿 = 𝑛𝑚𝑎𝑥𝑊,𝐿 = 1 2𝜌∞𝑉𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑙𝑙2 𝐶𝐿,𝑚𝑎𝑥𝑆

𝑛𝑚𝑎𝑥 = 1 2𝜌∞𝑉𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑙𝑙

2 𝐶𝐿,𝑚𝑎𝑥

𝑊 𝑆

• The speed at which the maximum lift is equal to the allowablestructural load factor is the corner speed and provides themaximum turn rate for a given altitude.

• Modern fighters have a corner speed around 300-350 knots.

Page 6: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Level turn

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• Corresponding turn rate:

𝜓 =𝑔 𝑛2 − 1

𝑉∞• Corresponding turn radius:

𝑅 =𝑉∞2

𝑔 𝑛2 − 1

Page 7: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

V-n diagram

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• V-n diagram depicts allowable load factors as a function of airspeed.

Page 8: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

V-n diagram

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• Corner velocity: the slowest speed at which the maximum loadfactor can be reached without stalling.

• Dive speed: represents the maximum dynamic pressure, q∞. The point representing maximum q∞ and nlimit is important forstructural design. Exceeding Vdive may result in phenomena likewing divergence, control surface reversal, etc.

𝑉𝑑𝑖𝑣𝑒 = 1.5 ∗ 𝑉𝑐𝑟𝑢𝑖𝑠𝑒 or 𝑉𝑑𝑖𝑣𝑒 = 1.2 ∗ 𝑉𝑚𝑎𝑥 for subsonic airplanes

𝑀𝑑𝑖𝑣𝑒 = 𝑀𝑚𝑎𝑥 + 0.2 for supersonic airplanes

Page 9: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Sustained turn

• An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed andaltitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous turn rate.

• Sustained turn rate is usually specified in terms of themaximum load factor at a given flight condition that the aircraftcan sustain, e.g. 4-5g at M=0.9 at 30000 ft.

𝑇 = 𝐷, 𝐿 = 𝑛𝑊 ⇒ 𝑛 =𝑇

𝑊

𝐿

𝐷

• Load factor in a sustained turn increases when T/W and L/D increases.

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Page 10: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Aerodynamic and structural limitson turn performance

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Page 11: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Aerodynamic and thrust limitson turn performance

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Page 12: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Pull-up maneuver

• At 𝑡 = 0 𝜃 = 0 :

𝐹𝑟 = 𝐿 −𝑊 = 𝑊 𝑛 − 1 = 𝑚𝑉∞2

𝑅=

𝑊

𝑔

𝑉∞2

𝑅

• Solving for turn radius:

𝑅 =𝑉∞2

𝑔(𝑛−1)

• Solving for turn rate:

𝜓 =𝑉∞

𝑅=

𝑔(𝑛−1)

𝑉∞

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Page 13: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Pull-down maneuver

• At 𝑡 = 0 𝜃 = 0 :

𝐹𝑟 = 𝐿 +𝑊 = 𝑊 𝑛 + 1 = 𝑚𝑉∞2

𝑅=

𝑊

𝑔

𝑉∞2

𝑅

• Solving for turn radius:

𝑅 =𝑉∞2

𝑔(𝑛+1)

• Solving for turn rate:

𝜓 =𝑉∞

𝑅=

𝑔(𝑛+1)

𝑉∞

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Page 14: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Gust loads

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• The loads experienced when the airplane encounters a stronggust (when flying close to a thunderstorm or during clear air

turbulence encounter) may exceed the maneuver loads.

Page 15: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Gust loads

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• When an airplane encounters a gust, the effect is to increasethe angle of attack:

Δ𝛼 = 𝑡𝑎𝑛−1𝑈

𝑉∞≈

𝑈

𝑉∞

∆𝐿 = 𝑞∞𝑆 𝐶𝐿𝛼∆𝛼 =1

2𝜌∞𝑉∞𝑆𝐶𝐿𝛼𝑈

∆𝑛 =∆𝐿

𝑊=

𝜌∞𝑉∞𝐶𝐿𝛼𝑈

2 𝑊 𝑆 load factor due to a gust

increases for aircraft with low wing loading!

Page 16: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Gust loads

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• The assumption that an airplane instantly encounters a gustand this gust instantly effects the airplane is unrealistic.

• Gusts follow cosine-like intensity increase allowing aircraftmore time to react. This reduces the acceleration experiencedby the airplane.

Page 17: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Gust loads

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• Gust velocity:

𝑈 = 𝐾𝑈𝑑𝑒 , 𝐾: gust alleviation factor

𝐾 =0.88𝜇

5.3+𝜇, subsonic flight

𝐾 =𝜇1.03

6.95+𝜇1.03, supersonic flight

𝜇 =2 𝑊 𝑆

𝜌∞𝑔 𝑐𝐶𝐿𝛼, mass ratio

𝑈𝑑𝑒 = 30 𝑓𝑡/𝑠, standard vertical gust, produces n=3g loadfactor, suitable for CS23 airplanes.

Page 18: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Gust loads

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Page 19: AE 452 Aeronautical Engineering Design IIae452/lecture2_air_loads.pdf · •An aircraft will probably not be able to maintain speed and altitude while turning at the maximum instantaneous

Gust loads

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Gust loads

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