Aircraft Design - Unit - I
Aircraft Design - Unit - I
Aircraft Design - Unit - I
INTRODUCTION:
The process of design of a device or a vehicle, in general involves the use of knowledge in
diverse fields to arrive at a product that will satisfy requirements regarding functional aspects,
operational safety and cost. The design of an airplane, which is being dealt in this course,
involves synthesizing knowledge in areas like aerodynamics, structures, propulsion, systems
and manufacturing techniques. The aim is to arrive at the configuration of an airplane, which
will satisfy aforesaid requirements.
The design of an airplane is a complex engineering task. It generally involves the following.
a) Obtaining the specifications of the airplane, selecting the type and determining the geometric
parameters.
b) Selection of the power plant.
c) Structural design and working out details of construction.
d) Fabrication of prototype.
e) Determination of airplane performance, stability, and structural integrity from flight tests.
Design project
After the preliminary design has been approved by the manufacturer / customer. The detailed
design studies are carried out. These include the following stages.
1) Wind tunnel and structural testing on models of airplane configuration arrived after
preliminary design stage. These tests serve as a check on the correctness of the estimated
characteristics and assessment of the new concepts proposed in the design.
2) Mock-up: This is a full scale model of the airplane or its important sections. This helps in
(a) Efficient lay-out of structural components and equipments, (b) checking the clearances,
firing angles of guns, visibility etc.
Currently this stage is avoided by the use of CAD (Computer Aided Design) packages which
provide detailed drawings of various components and subassemblies.
3) Complete wind tunnel testing of the approved configuration. Currently CFD
(Computational Fluid Dynamics) plays an important role in reducing the number of tests to
be carried-out. In CFD, the equations governing the fluid flow are solved numerically. The
results provide flow patterns, drag coefficient, lift coefficient, moment coefficient, pressure
distribution etc. Through the results may not be very accurate at high angles of attack, they
are generally accurate near the design point. Further, they provide information on the effects
of small changes in the geometric parameters, on the flow field and permit parametric studies.
4) Preparation of detailed drawings.
5) Final selection of power plant.
6) Calculations of (a) c.g. shift (b) performance and (c) stability.
7) Fabrication of prototypes. These are the first batch of full scale airplane. Generally six
prototypes are constructed. Some of them are used for verifying structural integrity and
functioning of various systems. Others are used for flight testing to evaluate performance and
stability.
Classification of airplanes
At this stage, it is helpful, to know about the different types of airplanes.
The classification is generally based on
(a) The purpose of the airplane,
(b) The configuration and
(c) Design Mach number (e.g. subsonic, supersonic and hypersonic).
Classification by Configuration
Airplanes can be classified in accordance with their shape and structural layout, which in turn
will contribute to their aerodynamic, tactical and operational characteristics. It can be done by
classification of the following:
(a) Shape and position of the wing
(b) Type of fuselage
(c) Location of horizontal tail surfaces
(d) Type of landing gear
(e) Location and number of engines.
Straight Swept
Wing Wing
Biplane Triplane
Types of Tails
b.Number of engines
Single-engine – HJT-16, DH Chipmunk, Hawker Hunter, etc.
Twin-engine – HF-24, DC-3, Canberra, etc.
Multi-engine – An-22, Boeing 707, Belfastetc.
c.Engine Located
Propeller single engine located in fuselage nose (HT-2, YAK-9, BEAGLE A-109).
“Pusher”-engine located in the rear fuselage (Bede x BD-2)
Engines (jet) submerged in the wing
(a) At the root – DH-Comet, TU-104, Tu-16
(b) Along the span – Canberra, U-2, YF-12A
Jet engines in nacelles suspended under the wing by “POD” mountings - Boeing 747,
Airbus, Boeing 707, DC-8, Convair 880,
Boom and Pod construction - Fairchild Packet, Vampire Engines (jet) located on the rear
fuselage – Trident, VC-10, IL-62, Caravelle
Jet engines located within the rear fuselage – HF-24 (Marut),
Lightning, MIG-19,…
Engine Arrangement
Factors affecting the configuration
The configuration of an airplane is finalized after giving consideration to the following
factors.
(I) Aerodynamics
(II) Low structural weight
(III) Lay-out peculiarities
(IV) Manufacturing procedures
(V) Cost and operational economics
(VI) Interaction between various features