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Wing design for a civil tiltrotor transport aircraftThe goal of this research is the proper tailoring of the civil tiltrotor's composite wing-box structure leading to a minimum-weight wing design. With focus on the structural design, the wing's aerodynamic shape and the rotor-pylon system are held fixed. The initial design requirement on drag reduction set the airfoil maximum thickness-to-chord ratio to 18 percent. The airfoil section is the scaled down version of the 23 percent-thick airfoil used in V-22's wing. With the project goal in mind, the research activities began with an investigation of the structural dynamic and aeroelastic characteristics of the tiltrotor configuration, and the identification of proper procedures to analyze and account for these characteristics in the wing design. This investigation led to a collection of more than thirty technical papers on the subject, some of which have been referenced here. The review of literature on the tiltrotor revealed the complexity of the system in terms of wing-rotor-pylon interactions. The aeroelastic instability or whirl flutter stemming from wing-rotor-pylon interactions is found to be the most critical mode of instability demanding careful consideration in the preliminary wing design. The placement of wing fundamental natural frequencies in bending and torsion relative to each other and relative to the rotor 1/rev frequencies is found to have a strong influence on the whirl flutter. The frequency placement guide based on a Bell Helicopter Textron study is used in the formulation of frequency constraints. The analysis and design studies are based on two different finite-element computer codes: (1) MSC/NASATRAN and (2) WIDOWAC. These programs are used in parallel with the motivation to eventually, upon necessary modifications and validation, use the simpler WIDOWAC code in the structural tailoring of the tiltrotor wing. Several test cases were studied for the preliminary comparison of the two codes. The results obtained so far indicate a good overall agreement between the two codes.
Document ID
19950011675
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Rais-Rohani, Masoud
(Mississippi State Univ. Mississippi State, MS, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
November 24, 1994
Subject Category
Aircraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-197523
NAS 1.26:197523
Report Number: NASA-CR-197523
Report Number: NAS 1.26:197523
Accession Number
95N18090
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG1-1571
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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