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Description
This thesis uses an aircraft aerodynamic model and propulsion data, which

represents a configuration similar to the Airbus A320, to perform trade studies to understand the weight and configuration effects of “out-of-trim” flight during takeoff, cruise, initial approach, and balked landing. It is found that flying an aircraft slightly above the

This thesis uses an aircraft aerodynamic model and propulsion data, which

represents a configuration similar to the Airbus A320, to perform trade studies to understand the weight and configuration effects of “out-of-trim” flight during takeoff, cruise, initial approach, and balked landing. It is found that flying an aircraft slightly above the angle of attack or pitch angle required for a trimmed, stabilized flight will cause the aircraft to lose speed rapidly. This effect is most noticeable for lighter aircraft and when one engine is rendered inoperative. In the event of an engine failure, if the pilot does not pitch the nose of the aircraft down quickly, speed losses are significant and potentially lead to stalling the aircraft. Even when the risk of stalling the aircraft is small, the implications on aircraft climb performance, obstacle clearance, and acceleration distances can still become problematic if the aircraft is not flown properly. When the aircraft is slightly above the trimmed angle of attack, the response is shown to closely follow the classical phugoid response where the aircraft will trade speed and altitude in an oscillatory manner. However, when the pitch angle is slightly above the trimmed condition, the aircraft does not show this phugoid pattern but instead just loses speed until it reaches a new stabilized trajectory, never having speed and altitude oscillate. In this event, the way a pilot should respond to both events is different and may cause confusion in the cockpit.
ContributorsDelisle, Mathew Robert (Author) / Takahashi, Timothy (Thesis advisor) / White, Daniel (Committee member) / Niemczyk, Mary (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
This study identifies the influence that leading-edge shape has on the aerodynamic characteristics of a wing using surface far-field and near-field analysis. It examines if a wake survey is the appropriate means for measuring profile drag and induced drag. The paper unveils the differences between sharp leading-edge and blunt leading-edge

This study identifies the influence that leading-edge shape has on the aerodynamic characteristics of a wing using surface far-field and near-field analysis. It examines if a wake survey is the appropriate means for measuring profile drag and induced drag. The paper unveils the differences between sharp leading-edge and blunt leading-edge wings with the tools of pressure loop, chordwise pressure distribution, span load plots and with wake integral computations. The analysis was performed using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), vortex lattice potential flow code (VORLAX), and a few wind-tunnels runs to acquire data for comparison. This study found that sharp leading-edge wings have less leading-edge suction and higher drag than blunt leading-edge wings.

The blunt leading-edge wings have less drag because the normal vector of the surface in the front section of the airfoil develops forces at opposed skin friction. The shape of the leading edge, in conjunction with the effect of viscosity, slightly alter the span load; both the magnitude of the lift and the transverse distribution. Another goal in this study is to verify the veracity of wake survey theory; the two different leading-edge shapes reveals the shortcoming of Mclean’s equation which is only applicable to blunt leading-edge wings.
ContributorsOu, Che Wei (Author) / Takahashi, Timothy (Thesis advisor) / Herrmann, Marcus (Committee member) / Huang, Huei-Ping (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
In previous work, the effects of power extraction for onboard electrical equipment and flight control systems were studied to determine which turbine shaft (i.e. high power shaft vs low power shaft) is best suited for power extraction. This thesis will look into an alternative option, a three-spool design with a

In previous work, the effects of power extraction for onboard electrical equipment and flight control systems were studied to determine which turbine shaft (i.e. high power shaft vs low power shaft) is best suited for power extraction. This thesis will look into an alternative option, a three-spool design with a high-pressure turbine, low-pressure turbine, and a turbine dedicated to driving the fan. One of the three-spool turbines is designed to be a vaneless counter-rotating turbine. The off-design performance of this new design will be compared to the traditional two-spool design to determine if the additional spool is a practical alternative to current designs for high shaft horsepower extraction requirements. Upon analysis, this thesis has shown that a three-spool engine with a vaneless counter-rotating stage has worse performance characteristics than traditional two-spool designs for UAV systems.
ContributorsBurgett, Luke Michael (Author) / Takahashi, Timothy (Thesis advisor) / Dahm, Werner (Committee member) / Trimble, Steve (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
This thesis encompasses research performed in the focus area of structural health monitoring. More specifically, this research focuses on high velocity impact testing of carbon fiber reinforced structures, especially plates, and evaluating the damage post-impact. To this end, various non-destructive evaluation techniques such as ultrasonic C-scan testing and flash thermography

This thesis encompasses research performed in the focus area of structural health monitoring. More specifically, this research focuses on high velocity impact testing of carbon fiber reinforced structures, especially plates, and evaluating the damage post-impact. To this end, various non-destructive evaluation techniques such as ultrasonic C-scan testing and flash thermography were utilized for post-impact analysis. MATLAB algorithms were written and refined for the localization and quantification of damage in plates using data from sensors such as piezoelectric and fiber Bragg gratings sensors. Throughout the thesis, the general plate theory and laminate plate theory, the operations and optimization of the gas gun, and the theory used for the damage localization algorithms will be discussed. Additional quantifiable results are to come in future semesters of experimentation, but this thesis outlines the framework upon which all the research will continue to advance.
ContributorsMccrea, John Patrick (Author) / Chattopadhyay, Aditi (Thesis director) / Borkowski, Luke (Committee member) / Department of Military Science (Contributor) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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Description
This thesis encompasses research performed in the focus area of structural health monitoring. More specifically, this research focuses on high velocity impact testing of carbon fiber reinforced structures, especially plates, and evaluating the damage post-impact. To this end, various non-destructive evaluation techniques such as ultrasonic C-scan testing and flash thermography

This thesis encompasses research performed in the focus area of structural health monitoring. More specifically, this research focuses on high velocity impact testing of carbon fiber reinforced structures, especially plates, and evaluating the damage post-impact. To this end, various non-destructive evaluation techniques such as ultrasonic C-scan testing and flash thermography were utilized for post-impact analysis. MATLAB algorithms were written and refined for the localization and quantification of damage in plates using data from sensors such as piezoelectric and fiber Bragg gratings sensors. Throughout the thesis, the general plate theory and laminate plate theory, the operations and optimization of the gas gun, and the theory used for the damage localization algorithms will be discussed. Additional quantifiable results are to come in future semesters of experimentation, but this thesis outlines the framework upon which all the research will continue to advance.
ContributorsMccrea, John Patrick (Author) / Chattopadhyay, Aditi (Thesis director) / Borkowski, Luke (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor) / Department of Military Science (Contributor)
Created2015-05
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Description
Advanced aerospace materials, including fiber reinforced polymer and ceramic matrix composites, are increasingly being used in critical and demanding applications, challenging the current damage prediction, detection, and quantification methodologies. Multiscale computational models offer key advantages over traditional analysis techniques and can provide the necessary capabilities for the development of a

Advanced aerospace materials, including fiber reinforced polymer and ceramic matrix composites, are increasingly being used in critical and demanding applications, challenging the current damage prediction, detection, and quantification methodologies. Multiscale computational models offer key advantages over traditional analysis techniques and can provide the necessary capabilities for the development of a comprehensive virtual structural health monitoring (SHM) framework. Virtual SHM has the potential to drastically improve the design and analysis of aerospace components through coupling the complementary capabilities of models able to predict the initiation and propagation of damage under a wide range of loading and environmental scenarios, simulate interrogation methods for damage detection and quantification, and assess the health of a structure. A major component of the virtual SHM framework involves having micromechanics-based multiscale composite models that can provide the elastic, inelastic, and damage behavior of composite material systems under mechanical and thermal loading conditions and in the presence of microstructural complexity and variability. Quantification of the role geometric and architectural variability in the composite microstructure plays in the local and global composite behavior is essential to the development of appropriate scale-dependent unit cells and boundary conditions for the multiscale model. Once the composite behavior is predicted and variability effects assessed, wave-based SHM simulation models serve to provide knowledge on the probability of detection and characterization accuracy of damage present in the composite. The research presented in this dissertation provides the foundation for a comprehensive SHM framework for advanced aerospace materials. The developed models enhance the prediction of damage formation as a result of ceramic matrix composite processing, improve the understanding of the effects of architectural and geometric variability in polymer matrix composites, and provide an accurate and computational efficient modeling scheme for simulating guided wave excitation, propagation, interaction with damage, and sensing in a range of materials. The methodologies presented in this research represent substantial progress toward the development of an accurate and generalized virtual SHM framework.
ContributorsBorkowski, Luke (Author) / Chattopadhyay, Aditi (Thesis advisor) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Mignolet, Marc (Committee member) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Rajadas, John (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
There are many computer aided engineering tools and software used by aerospace engineers to design and predict specific parameters of an airplane. These tools help a design engineer predict and calculate such parameters such as lift, drag, pitching moment, takeoff range, maximum takeoff weight, maximum flight range and much more.

There are many computer aided engineering tools and software used by aerospace engineers to design and predict specific parameters of an airplane. These tools help a design engineer predict and calculate such parameters such as lift, drag, pitching moment, takeoff range, maximum takeoff weight, maximum flight range and much more. However, there are very limited ways to predict and calculate the minimum control speeds of an airplane in engine inoperative flight. There are simple solutions, as well as complicated solutions, yet there is neither standard technique nor consistency throughout the aerospace industry. To further complicate this subject, airplane designers have the option of using an Automatic Thrust Control System (ATCS), which directly alters the minimum control speeds of an airplane.

This work addresses this issue with a tool used to predict and calculate the Minimum Control Speed on the Ground (VMCG) as well as the Minimum Control Airspeed (VMCA) of any existing or design-stage airplane. With simple line art of an airplane, a program called VORLAX is used to generate an aerodynamic database used to calculate the stability derivatives of an airplane. Using another program called Numerical Propulsion System Simulation (NPSS), a propulsion database is generated to use with the aerodynamic database to calculate both VMCG and VMCA.

This tool was tested using two airplanes, the Airbus A320 and the Lockheed Martin C130J-30 Super Hercules. The A320 does not use an Automatic Thrust Control System (ATCS), whereas the C130J-30 does use an ATCS. The tool was able to properly calculate and match known values of VMCG and VMCA for both of the airplanes. The fact that this tool was able to calculate the known values of VMCG and VMCA for both airplanes means that this tool would be able to predict the VMCG and VMCA of an airplane in the preliminary stages of design. This would allow design engineers the ability to use an Automatic Thrust Control System (ATCS) as part of the design of an airplane and still have the ability to predict the VMCG and VMCA of the airplane.
ContributorsHadder, Eric Michael (Author) / Takahashi, Timothy (Thesis advisor) / Mignolet, Marc (Committee member) / White, Daniel (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
In today’s day and age, the use of automated technology is becoming increasingly prevalent. Throughout the aerospace industry, we see the use of automated systems in manufacturing, testing, and, progressively, in design. This thesis focuses on the idea of automated structural design that can be directly coupled with parametric Computer-Aided

In today’s day and age, the use of automated technology is becoming increasingly prevalent. Throughout the aerospace industry, we see the use of automated systems in manufacturing, testing, and, progressively, in design. This thesis focuses on the idea of automated structural design that can be directly coupled with parametric Computer-Aided Drafting (CAD) and used to support aircraft conceptual design. This idea has been around for many years; however, with the advancement of CAD technology, it is becoming more realistic. Having the ability to input design parameters, analyze the structure, and produce a basic CAD model not only saves time in the design process but provides an excellent platform to communicate ideas. The user has the ability to change parameters and quickly determine the effect on the structure. Coupling this idea with automated parametric CAD provides visual verification and a platform to export into Finite Element Analysis (FEA) for further verification.
ContributorsAnderson, Benjamin Kyle (Author) / Takahashi, Timothy (Thesis advisor) / Bolukbasi, Akif (Committee member) / Patel, Jay (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
Advanced fibrous composite materials exhibit outstanding thermomechanical performance under extreme environments, which make them ideal for structural components that are used in a wide range of aerospace, nuclear, and defense applications. The integrity and residual useful life of these components, however, are strongly influenced by their inherent material flaws and

Advanced fibrous composite materials exhibit outstanding thermomechanical performance under extreme environments, which make them ideal for structural components that are used in a wide range of aerospace, nuclear, and defense applications. The integrity and residual useful life of these components, however, are strongly influenced by their inherent material flaws and defects resulting from the complex fabrication processes. These defects exist across multiple length scales and govern several scale-dependent inelastic deformation mechanisms of each of the constituents as well as their composite damage anisotropy. Tailoring structural components for optimal performance requires addressing the knowledge gap regarding the microstructural material morphology that governs the structural scale damage and failure response. Therefore, there is a need for a high-fidelity multiscale modeling framework and scale-specific in-situ experimental characterization that can capture complex inelastic mechanisms, including damage initiation and propagation across multiple length scales. This dissertation presents a novel multiscale computational framework that accounts for experimental information pertinent to microstructure morphology and architectural variabilities to investigate the response of ceramic matrix composites (CMCs) with manufacturing-induced defects. First, a three-dimensional orthotropic viscoplasticity creep formulation is developed to capture the complex temperature- and time-dependent constituent load transfer mechanisms in different CMC material systems. The framework also accounts for a reformulated fracture mechanics-informed matrix damage model and the Curtin progressive fiber damage model to capture the complex scale-dependent damage and failure mechanisms through crack kinetics and porosity growth. Next, in-situ experiments using digital image correlation (DIC) are performed to capture the damage and failure mechanisms in CMCs and to validate the high-fidelity modeling results. The dissertation also presents an exhaustive experimental investigation into the effects of temperature and manufacturing-induced defects on toughened epoxy adhesives and hybrid composite-metallic bonded joints. Nondestructive evaluation techniques are utilized to characterize the inherent defects morphology of the bulk adhesives and bonded interface. This is followed by quasi-static tensile tests conducted at extreme hot and cold temperature conditions. The damage mechanisms and failure modes are investigated using in-situ DIC and a high-resolution camera. The information from the morphology characterization studies is used to reconstruct high-fidelity geometries of the test specimens for finite element analysis.
ContributorsKhafagy, Khaled Hassan Abdo (Author) / Chattopadhyay, Aditi (Thesis advisor) / Fard, Masoud Y. (Committee member) / Milcarek, Ryan (Committee member) / Stoumbos, Tom (Committee member) / Borkowski, Luke (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
This thesis describes the extension of an aircraft-style time-step integrating mission performance simulation to address aero-spaceplane design challenges. The result is a computationally lean program compatible with current Multi-Disciplinary Optimization schemes to assist in the conceptual design of hypersonic vehicles. To do this the starting aircraft style “Mission Code” required

This thesis describes the extension of an aircraft-style time-step integrating mission performance simulation to address aero-spaceplane design challenges. The result is a computationally lean program compatible with current Multi-Disciplinary Optimization schemes to assist in the conceptual design of hypersonic vehicles. To do this the starting aircraft style “Mission Code” required enhancements to the typical point-mass simulation for high altitude and high Mach flight. Stability parameters and the rigid-body modes of Short-Period and Dutch-Roll are tracked to understand time-domain limits to aerodynamic control, along with monitoring the Lateral Control Departure Parameter to ensure that the aircraft is not prone to spin. Additionally, experience has shown that for high Mach Number flight designers must consider aerothermodynamic effects early in the vehicle design process, and thus, an engineering level aerothermodynamic model is included. Comparisons to North American X-15 flight test datasets demonstrate the validity of this method in that application, and trade studies conducted show the utility of this application.
ContributorsGriffin, Jack Aidan (Author) / Takahashi, Timothy (Thesis advisor) / Dahm, Werner (Committee member) / Rodi, Patrick (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022