The effects of atmospheric turbulence on fuel consumption in extended formation flight

Includes bibliographical references. === Extended formation flight (streamwise separations of between 10 to 40 spans), has been recently proposed as a method for reducing the induced drag of commercial aircraft. However, induced drag savings are not necessarily directly indicative of fuel savings. I...

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Main Author: Sanders, Drewan S
Other Authors: Redelinghuys, Christiaan
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9147
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-91472020-12-10T05:11:17Z The effects of atmospheric turbulence on fuel consumption in extended formation flight Sanders, Drewan S Redelinghuys, Christiaan Medicine Includes bibliographical references. Extended formation flight (streamwise separations of between 10 to 40 spans), has been recently proposed as a method for reducing the induced drag of commercial aircraft. However, induced drag savings are not necessarily directly indicative of fuel savings. In a realistic environment, atmospheric turbulence will continuously perturb the formation’s aircraft and their wakes. As a result, each aircraft in the formation will experience fluctuations in aerodynamic loads. For an aircraft to maintain accurately its position within a formation, it must continually adjust its throttle setting. This dynamic throttling may result in inefficient engine operation, thereby detracting from the reductions in induced drag. In this work, a high-fidelity transient engine model, representative of a typical commercial high-bypass turbofan engine, has been incorporated within a simple twin-aircraft formation flight simulator. The aerodynamic interactions between aircraft were modelled using a horseshoe vortex method, specially adapted for extended formations. The aircraft were constrained to longitudinal motion, with altitude fixed. This created a two degree of freedom formation model that is analogous to wind tunnel experimentation. A simple proportional gain controller was used to manipulate the throttle settings, in an attempt to maintain the trail aircraft’s position relative to the leader, in a turbulent atmosphere. It was found that a fuel saving of approximately 25 may be achieved at a practical lateral separation of 1 span, corresponding to a stream-wise separation of 20 ± 0.3 spans, in moderate turbulence levels. 2014-11-05T03:50:54Z 2014-11-05T03:50:54Z 2014 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9147 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment Department of Mechanical Engineering
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Sanders, Drewan S
The effects of atmospheric turbulence on fuel consumption in extended formation flight
description Includes bibliographical references. === Extended formation flight (streamwise separations of between 10 to 40 spans), has been recently proposed as a method for reducing the induced drag of commercial aircraft. However, induced drag savings are not necessarily directly indicative of fuel savings. In a realistic environment, atmospheric turbulence will continuously perturb the formation’s aircraft and their wakes. As a result, each aircraft in the formation will experience fluctuations in aerodynamic loads. For an aircraft to maintain accurately its position within a formation, it must continually adjust its throttle setting. This dynamic throttling may result in inefficient engine operation, thereby detracting from the reductions in induced drag. In this work, a high-fidelity transient engine model, representative of a typical commercial high-bypass turbofan engine, has been incorporated within a simple twin-aircraft formation flight simulator. The aerodynamic interactions between aircraft were modelled using a horseshoe vortex method, specially adapted for extended formations. The aircraft were constrained to longitudinal motion, with altitude fixed. This created a two degree of freedom formation model that is analogous to wind tunnel experimentation. A simple proportional gain controller was used to manipulate the throttle settings, in an attempt to maintain the trail aircraft’s position relative to the leader, in a turbulent atmosphere. It was found that a fuel saving of approximately 25 may be achieved at a practical lateral separation of 1 span, corresponding to a stream-wise separation of 20 ± 0.3 spans, in moderate turbulence levels.
author2 Redelinghuys, Christiaan
author_facet Redelinghuys, Christiaan
Sanders, Drewan S
author Sanders, Drewan S
author_sort Sanders, Drewan S
title The effects of atmospheric turbulence on fuel consumption in extended formation flight
title_short The effects of atmospheric turbulence on fuel consumption in extended formation flight
title_full The effects of atmospheric turbulence on fuel consumption in extended formation flight
title_fullStr The effects of atmospheric turbulence on fuel consumption in extended formation flight
title_full_unstemmed The effects of atmospheric turbulence on fuel consumption in extended formation flight
title_sort effects of atmospheric turbulence on fuel consumption in extended formation flight
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9147
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