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Design study of structural concepts for an arrow-wing supersonic-cruise aircraft
- Publication Year :
- 1975
- Publisher :
- United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1975.
-
Abstract
- An analytical study was performed to determine the best structural approach for design of primary wing and fuselage structure of a Mach number 2.7 arrow-wing supersonic cruise aircraft. Concepts were evaluated considering near-term start-of-design. Emphasis was placed on the complex interactions between thermal stress, static aeroelasticity, flutter, fatigue and fail-safe design, static and dynamic loads, and the effects of variations in structural arrangements, concepts and materials on these interactions. Results indicate that a hybrid wing structure incorporating low-profile convex-beaded and honeycomb sandwich surface panels of titanium alloy 6Al-4V were the most efficient. The substructure includes titanium alloy spar caps reinforced with Boron-polyimide composites. The fuselage shell is a closed-hat stiffened skin and frame construction of titanium alloy 6Al-4V. This paper presents an executive summary of the study effort, and includes a discussion of the overall study logic, design philosophy and interaction between the analytical methods for supersonic cruise aircraft design.
- Subjects :
- Aircraft Design, Testing And Performance
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- NASA Technical Reports
- Notes :
- NAS1-12288
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsnas.19750055457
- Document Type :
- Report