THE ART OF MATERIAL SELECTION FOR THE DESIGN AND MANUFACTURE OF AEROSPACE VEHICLES
PERSONAL VIEW OF A SMALL AIRFRAMER‘S EMPLOYEEINTERNAL REFERENCE: MP-00-MI-10-061, ISSUE 1
MP-00-MI-10-061
U. Thomann
Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Urs I. Thomann
• MSc. in materials science
• Graduate studies in corrosion resistant high strength steels
• Ph.D. in composites science
with Pilatus since 2003:
• Materials and processes specialist
• Project Manager, landing gear redesign
• Since 2006, Director Production ManagementTrainer Aircraft
MP-00-MI-10-061
U. Thomann
Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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Contents
• Driving forces for material selection
• Yesterday’s, today’s and tomorrow’s material mix in aeroplanes
• Some examples of material selections (or refusals)
• A spotlight on composites: benefits and challenges
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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MATERIAL SELECTION: DRIVING FORCES
1. Cost reduction
2. Cost reduction
3. Cost reduction
4. Weight reduction, linked with cost through operating cost reduction (increased payload/range)
5. Maintenance cost (life cycle cost reduction) Advanced technologies are „only“ the means to achieve all but
only financial goals in all phases of the product‘s life! Safety is always a built-in feature granted through compliance
with ever more stringent regulations as issued by (multi)national authorities (EASA, FAA,...)
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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COST REDUCTION THROUGH COMPOSITES
• Design integration fewer parts reduction of structural assembly labour cost reduction
• Low density/high strength reduction of empty weight increased payload/range increased operating profit
• Improved corrosion resistance lower life cycle cost
Potential estimated at 30 % weight reduction, 40 % cost reduction compared with standard metal leight weight design (1990‘s) BUT...
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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... THE ALUMINIUM FACTION DID NOT LAZE!
• Advanced joining technologies design integration fewer parts reduction of structural assembly labour cost reduction
• New alloys lower density/higher strength reduction of empty weight increased payload/range increased operating profit
Potential estimated at 20 % weight reduction, 20 % cost reduction compared with standard metal light weight design (1990‘s)
Friction Stir Welding
Laser Beam Welding
or extrusion
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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A380 – ALUMINIUM STRUCTURE BENCHMARK
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AIRFRAME MATERIALS: PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE
Com
posi
te w
eigh
t pe
rcen
tage
Tendency:
• More composite materials
• Tailored matieral mix to improve over all systems performance
EXAMPLES OF MATERIAL SELECTIONS (OR REFUSALS)
INTERNAL REFERENCE: MP-00-MI-10-061, ISSUE 1
MP-00-MI-10-061
U. Thomann
Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT THROUGH ADVANCED MATERIAL TECHNOLOGIES
• Higher combustion temperatures yield higher thermodynamic efficiency and thus lower fuel consumption
• Today‘s technology with single crystal nickel alloys and oxide dispersioned strengthened (ODS) super alloys with bleed air cooling cannot provide the required step change in fuel consumption
„New“ high temperature/high strength materials along with new design concepts required Ceramic matrix composites
max
ambientmax
T
TT
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U. Thomann
Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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WEIGHT REDUCTION THROUGHHIGH STRENGTH MATERIALS
• Typical steel applications: Heavily stressed bolts, bushings and special fittings in the landing gear and engine pylon, moderately temperature stressed portions of engine shrouds,...
• Despite the tendency of decreasing steel weight fraction of the airframe there is still some weight saving potential by employing novel high strength, corrosion resistant steels
• However, such novel alloys like e.g. nitrogen alloyed pressure electro slag remelted austhenitic stainless steels are still not offered (nor demanded) in aerospace certificated grades
• Weight saving potential is probably not big enough to off-set certification cost
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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LESS OBVIOUS MATERIAL SELECTION CRITERIA:PC-21 FIREWALL
• Frame to separate cockpit from engine is manufactured from titanium
• Firewall has to withstand an engine fire for a defined duration without allowing the heat to penetrate into the front cockpit
• Titanium has much lower heat conductivity than steel or aluminium and retains reasonable strength at higher temperatures
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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ELASTOMERS
• Still the best material to cope with excessive wear experienced by the tires is natural rubber!
• O-ring seals and flexible hoses: make sure to select the right material depending on media to be sealed against or flowing through:
– Chloroprene withstands fuel but not ozone and UV light
– Isoprene is easy with ozone und UV light but not with fuel or hydraulic fluids
– Nitrile butadiene rubber (NBR) happily swims in hydraulic fluids but should not be exposed to ambient air with ozone and UV light
– Fluoropolymer rubbers are expensive but cope with almost every environment, even at somewhat elevated temperatures
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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POLYSULFIDE SEALANTS
• Sealants are the true cost savers throughout an aeroplane‘s life
• Making the pressurised fuselage air tight and the integral wing tank fuel tight is only the most obvious primary function of a true but modest champion
• Seals crevices to prevent corrosion due to moisture entrapment
• Releases chromates to prevent microbial attack in the integral tank
• Chromates also actively inhibit corrosion in general
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COMPOSITES FOR PROTOTYPING
• Some composites manufacturing processes allow for quick prototyping at modest tooling and production cost
Ideal for validation of concept studies specifically for full scale aerodynamic tests
Risk mitigation, development cost reduction
PC-21 UWT H-tail fin: 5 days from design to prototype
A SPOTLIGHT ON COMPOSITES:BENEFITS AND CHALLENGES
INTERNAL REFERENCE: MP-00-MI-10-061, ISSUE 1
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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ALUMINIUM VS. COMPOSITE TRUCTURE
Advan
tages
Aluminum
Challe
ng
es
Composite
• Long-term experience
• High automation level
• Advanced joining technologies
• Standardized material
• Standard Certification procedure
• Low density (weight reduction)
• High strength and stiffness
• Improved fatigue behavior
• Less corrosion
• Design freedom
• Reduced manufacturing costs
• Reduced Direct Operating Costs
• Fatigue
• Corrosion
• Subprocesses
• Design
• Impact sensitivity
• Environmental influences
• Material + manufacturing diversity
• Certification (not standardized mat.)
• High material cost
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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IMPROVED CORROSION RESISTANCE – ONLY HALF OF THE TRUTH!
• Yes, by and large carbon fibre composites are pretty much unaffected by corrosive environments, but...
• ... aluminium alloys are even more affected when in direct contact with carbon fibres due to extreme electrochemical potential difference between carbon and aluminium
Cadmium plated stainless steel/nickel fasteners needed: More expensive heavier than aluminium fasteners
More titanium in direct contact with carbon fibre composites employed: More expensive raw material and more complex production
processes than aluminium Similar specific strength/stiffness as aluminium
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RAW MATERIAL DIVERSITYComposite
Reinforcement (Fibers)
Fiber
Carbon
Thermosets
Polymer
Matrix (Polymer)
Glass Aramid
Thermoplastics
Cyanesther
Epoxy
Bismaleimide
Phenolic
…
…
IMS
AS4
HTA
T800
UD fabric Woven fabric Mat
Natural
Filament
…
PPS
PEI
PEEK
HTS
T700
… … ……
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
Diversity due to user-defined raw material combination
Objective:
Material combination = Design and manufacturing requirements
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MANUFACTURING PROCESS DIVERSITY
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COMPOSITE – DESIGN, MANUFACTURING, MATERIAL
Interaction
Manufacturing
Design
Material
• Process limitations• Laminate quality:
- Fiber volume fraction- Internal and external defects- Dimensions
• Surface condition• Quantity• Quality control• Process qualification• Costs
• Design, e.g.:- Integral or differential- Monolithic and/or sandwich- Frame-Stringer or Spar-Rips, etc.
• Design philosophy- Safe life- Fail safe- damage tolerance
• Strength and stiffness requirements• Static and dynamic analysis• Further considerations:
- Inspection- Repair procedure - Lightning protection- Electrical grounding
• Material properties• Semi-finished products• Environmental influences:
- Temperature- Humidity
• Quality control• Availability• Price
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CERTIFICATION
Composite Metal
Material Tests
• Generic specimens
• Determine material data
• Understand deformations and failure modes
Establish Design
Proof Tests
• Aircraft-specific specimens
• Demonstrate ultimate load or fatigue capability
• Include defects, damage, environmental effects
Validate Design
No tests due to standardized material and long-term experience
Very little tests in case of special design features
Same as composite
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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CERTIFICATION
E.g. coupons tests:• Mechanical properties, e.g.:
– Laminate: Strength and stiffness etc. in tension, compression and shear.– Engineering data: Strength in tension and compression with and without
holes; bearing strength; Compression After Impact strength• Physical properties, e.g.:
– Density, glass transition temperature Tg, volume fraction, cured ply thickness
• Environmental influences, e.g.:– From -55°C to +55°C OAT in dry and wet conditions– Contaminations (hydraulic fluid, jet fuel, solvents, paint stripper)
• Requirements for storage, handling, processing, machining etc. Data must be established by means of a qualification programme for each
specific composite material.
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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• Raw material testing
– Physical and chemical tests
– Mechanical coupons tests
• Manufacturing control
– Process control
• Component testing
– Visual inspection
– Dimension and weight control
– Ultrasonic inspection
– Mechanical test of coupons which accompanied the curing process
QUALITY CONTROL
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U. Thomann
Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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SOME CRITICAL COMMENTS
• Use of composites in aerospace is about to degenerate to a marketing crusade
• Composites should not be used for the sake of composites usage but for their beneficial properties in some (but not all) applications
• There is still a lot of black metal design even in the most recently developed products, which by and large defeats most of the composite‘s advantages over standard materials
• The holy grail lies in design integration and eventually certification of advanced joining techniques
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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Materials for Aerospace Vehicles
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SUMMARY
• Deep knowledge of the present state of the art in each class of materials is essential
• There is no right or wrong material selection; it is rather a complex decision making process depending on
– OEM’s design and manufacturing skill and experience level
– Requirements
– Balance of value and cost
• Mastering the art of selecting the best performing material for any given purpose of application is really at the core of the successful design of an aerospace vehicle
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THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION