Actuator-Work Concepts Applied to Morphing and Conventional Aerodynamic Control Devices

The research presented in this thesis examines the use of an estimated "actuator work" value as a performance parameter for the comparison of various aerodynamic control device configurations. This estimated "actuator work," or practical work as it will be referred to as in this...

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Main Author: Johnston, Christopher Owen
Other Authors: Aerospace and Ocean Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/9625
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11232003-133555
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-96252020-09-29T05:41:34Z Actuator-Work Concepts Applied to Morphing and Conventional Aerodynamic Control Devices Johnston, Christopher Owen Aerospace and Ocean Engineering Mason, William H. Inman, Daniel J. Robertshaw, Harry H. thin airfoil theory morphing aircraft aerodynamics The research presented in this thesis examines the use of an estimated "actuator work" value as a performance parameter for the comparison of various aerodynamic control device configurations. This estimated "actuator work," or practical work as it will be referred to as in this thesis, is based on the aerodynamic and structural resistance to a control surface deflection. It is meant to represent the actuator energy cost required to deflect a general configuration of conventional or unconventional control surface. Thin airfoil theory is used to predict the aerodynamic load distribution required for this work calculation. The details of applying thin airfoil theory to many different types of control surface arrangements are presented. Convenient equations for the aerodynamic load distributions and aerodynamic coefficients are obtained. Using the developed practical work equations, and considering only the aerodynamic load component, the practical work required for a given change in lift is compared between different control surface arrangements. For single control surface cases, it is found that a quadratic (morphing) trailing edge flap requires less practical work than a linear flap of the same size. As the angle of attack at which the change in lift occurs increases, the benefit of the quadratic flap becomes greater. For multiple control surface cases, it is necessary to determine the set of control deflections that require the minimum practical work for a given change in lift. For small values of the initial angle of attack, it is found that a two-segment quadratic trailing edge flap (MTE) requires more work than a two-segment linear flap (TETAB). But, above a small value of angle of attack, the MTE case becomes superior to the TETAB case. Similar results are found when a 1-DOF static aeroelastic model is included in the calculation. The minimum work control deflections for the aeroelastic cases are shown to be strongly dependent on the dynamic pressure. Master of Science 2011-08-06T14:42:32Z 2011-08-06T14:42:32Z 2003-11-14 2003-11-23 2003-12-02 2003-12-02 Thesis etd-11232003-133555 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/9625 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11232003-133555 Johnston_Thesis.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic thin airfoil theory
morphing aircraft
aerodynamics
spellingShingle thin airfoil theory
morphing aircraft
aerodynamics
Johnston, Christopher Owen
Actuator-Work Concepts Applied to Morphing and Conventional Aerodynamic Control Devices
description The research presented in this thesis examines the use of an estimated "actuator work" value as a performance parameter for the comparison of various aerodynamic control device configurations. This estimated "actuator work," or practical work as it will be referred to as in this thesis, is based on the aerodynamic and structural resistance to a control surface deflection. It is meant to represent the actuator energy cost required to deflect a general configuration of conventional or unconventional control surface. Thin airfoil theory is used to predict the aerodynamic load distribution required for this work calculation. The details of applying thin airfoil theory to many different types of control surface arrangements are presented. Convenient equations for the aerodynamic load distributions and aerodynamic coefficients are obtained. Using the developed practical work equations, and considering only the aerodynamic load component, the practical work required for a given change in lift is compared between different control surface arrangements. For single control surface cases, it is found that a quadratic (morphing) trailing edge flap requires less practical work than a linear flap of the same size. As the angle of attack at which the change in lift occurs increases, the benefit of the quadratic flap becomes greater. For multiple control surface cases, it is necessary to determine the set of control deflections that require the minimum practical work for a given change in lift. For small values of the initial angle of attack, it is found that a two-segment quadratic trailing edge flap (MTE) requires more work than a two-segment linear flap (TETAB). But, above a small value of angle of attack, the MTE case becomes superior to the TETAB case. Similar results are found when a 1-DOF static aeroelastic model is included in the calculation. The minimum work control deflections for the aeroelastic cases are shown to be strongly dependent on the dynamic pressure. === Master of Science
author2 Aerospace and Ocean Engineering
author_facet Aerospace and Ocean Engineering
Johnston, Christopher Owen
author Johnston, Christopher Owen
author_sort Johnston, Christopher Owen
title Actuator-Work Concepts Applied to Morphing and Conventional Aerodynamic Control Devices
title_short Actuator-Work Concepts Applied to Morphing and Conventional Aerodynamic Control Devices
title_full Actuator-Work Concepts Applied to Morphing and Conventional Aerodynamic Control Devices
title_fullStr Actuator-Work Concepts Applied to Morphing and Conventional Aerodynamic Control Devices
title_full_unstemmed Actuator-Work Concepts Applied to Morphing and Conventional Aerodynamic Control Devices
title_sort actuator-work concepts applied to morphing and conventional aerodynamic control devices
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/9625
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11232003-133555
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