Understanding Base Thrust of Highly Truncated Aerospike Nozzles

Description
This thesis examines how a recently proposed concept for a highly-truncated aerospike nozzle can be expected to perform at altitudes corresponding to ambient pressures from sea-level to full vacuum conditions, as would occur during second-stage ascent and during second-stage descent and return to

This thesis examines how a recently proposed concept for a highly-truncated aerospike nozzle can be expected to perform at altitudes corresponding to ambient pressures from sea-level to full vacuum conditions, as would occur during second-stage ascent and during second-stage descent and return to Earth. Of particular importance is how the base pressure varies with ambient pressure, especially at low ambient pressures for which the resulting highly underexpanded flows exiting from discrete thrust chambers around the truncated aerospike merge to create a closed (unventilated) base flow. The objective was to develop an approximate but usefully accurate and technically rooted way of estimating conditions for which the jets issuing from adjacent thrust chambers will merge before the end of the truncated aerospike is reached. Three main factors that determine the merging distance are the chamber pressure, the altitude, and the spacing between adjacent thrust chambers. The Prandtl-Meyer expansion angle was used to approximate the initial expansion of the jet flow issuing from each thrust chamber. From this an approximate criterion was developed for the downstream distance at which the jet flows from adjacent thrust chambers merge. Variations in atmospheric gas composition, specific heat ratio, temperature, and pressure with altitude from sea-level to 600 km were accounted for. Results showed that with decreasing atmospheric pressure during vehicle ascent, the merging distance decreases as the jet flows become increasingly under-expanded. Increasing the number of thrust chambers decreases the merging distance exponentially, and increasing chamber pressure results in a decrease of the merging distance as well.
Date Created
2024-05
Agent

Aerodynamic Nuances on Wings Subjected to Ground Effect

191750-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
This thesis aims to determine how finite wing aerodynamic loads change in proximity to the ground. In this study, the primary design tool is an inviscid panel method code, VORLAX. The validation tool is a commercial volume grid CFD package,

This thesis aims to determine how finite wing aerodynamic loads change in proximity to the ground. In this study, the primary design tool is an inviscid panel method code, VORLAX. The validation tool is a commercial volume grid CFD package, ANSYS FLUENT. I use VORLAX to simulate wings with different incidences and aspect ratios to look at how ground effect impacts spanwise loading and incipient flow separation. Then the results were compared to widely published equations such as McCormick, Torenbeek, and Hoerner & Borst. Because I found that these “famous” equations function best only for specific conditions, I propose a new empirical equation to estimate ground effect lift as a function of aspect ratio and incidence. Using Stratford’s method to predict signs of flow separation in the inviscid solutions, I found that variations in the height above the ground were not significant enough to change the stall angle of low aspect ratio wings. I did find early signs of flow separation with increasing aspect ratio. I observe significant changes in spanwise loading when in ground effect; as I narrow the gap, the transverse loading builds higher near the center of the wing. These effects were more apparent in wings with smaller aspect ratio; higher aspect ratio wings experience a higher loading gradient near the tips in proximity to the ground. I found that high aspect ratio wings have a smaller stall angle compared to that of lower aspect ratio wings; these trends are consistent between the potential flow solution and the volume grid CFD viscous solution.
Date Created
2024
Agent

Attainable Moment Sets - Approaches to Understanding Trim Capability in Conceptual Design

190699-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
This thesis addresses the issue of assessing longitudinal and lateral-directional trim capability during the conceptual design process. Modern high-performance aircraft are likely to feature complex flight control systems where the control system may independently command every control surface to develo

This thesis addresses the issue of assessing longitudinal and lateral-directional trim capability during the conceptual design process. Modern high-performance aircraft are likely to feature complex flight control systems where the control system may independently command every control surface to develop necessary moments. However, to prove stability and controllability on such an aircraft requires a near-final set of control laws. This requirement is onerous at the conceptual design level, where engineering methods need to facilitate rapid, multidisciplinary design optimization trades. This work considers the differences in Attainable Moment Sets across a wide variety of airframes using a simplified “pre-mix” approach to controls as well as a model where the control systems have independent command authority over each control surface. This work indicates that the “independent-single-panel” model offers modest improvements in attainable moments over a “pre-mix” strategy. This suggests that a “pre-mix” approach used to assess basic combined trim problems will not lead to an overly conservative final design.
Date Created
2023
Agent

Increasing Lateral-Directional Controllability and Investigating Elevator-Body Flap Interaction for Shuttle Orbiter

187594-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
This thesis investigates the configurations needed to demonstrate positive lateraldirectional controllability across the flight envelope of a hypersonic vehicle. Itexamines the NASA Space Shuttle Orbiter as a baseline reference configuration, as it was a successful hypersonic vehicle. However, the Orbiter had

This thesis investigates the configurations needed to demonstrate positive lateraldirectional controllability across the flight envelope of a hypersonic vehicle. Itexamines the NASA Space Shuttle Orbiter as a baseline reference configuration, as it was a successful hypersonic vehicle. However, the Orbiter had limited high-speed maneuvering capability; it relied on reaction-control jets to augment controllability due to a strong tendency for its aerodynamics to “control couple.” It was seen that many problems associated with the control of the hypersonic Orbiter are due to its slender configuration. This work relies upon the Evolved-Bihrle-Weissman chart as an accurate indicator of lateral-directional stability and controllability. The also explores variant configurations of larger wing tip verticals to explore what configuration changes are needed to reduce dependence on reaction controls.
Date Created
2023
Agent

Analysis of High Frequency Binaural Audio

Description

This report describes the findings of an experiment designed to explore the nature of human hearing using binaural sound. The experiment also set out to determine a way to accurately find positional data from sound. Binaural recordings were made of

This report describes the findings of an experiment designed to explore the nature of human hearing using binaural sound. The experiment also set out to determine a way to accurately find positional data from sound. Binaural recordings were made of high frequency sounds at various angles and the data was postprocessed to find the group delay and difference of intensity between the two channels. To do this, two methods were used. The first relied on manually analyzing the data by visually looking for the points of interest. The second method used a MATLAB program to scan the data for the points of interest by using a Fourier analysis. It was determined that while the first method has the potential to provide better results it is impractical and not representative of how human hearing works. The second method was far more efficient and demonstrated the reliance of human hearing on the difference of intensities. It was determined that through the use of the second method accurate positional data could be obtained by comparing the differences with experimental data.

Date Created
2023-05
Agent

A Feasibility Study of Global Commercial SST, Building a Database on Routing Financials and Logistics for Major Airline Corporations

Description

Today, the vision of Commercial Supersonic Travel is often dreamed possible with innovation. Modern tech-business plans to reinvent commercial SuperSonic Transport (SST), while gaining reliable venture capital investment and proactive social backing. However, the concept’s global viability remains questionable, as

Today, the vision of Commercial Supersonic Travel is often dreamed possible with innovation. Modern tech-business plans to reinvent commercial SuperSonic Transport (SST), while gaining reliable venture capital investment and proactive social backing. However, the concept’s global viability remains questionable, as regulation opposes its integrability. As a result, SST has become industrially forgotten. This research paper challenges the neglect of SST through routing optimizations derived from an industry’s collective research, while outlining decisive use-cases. Initially, this paper describes the difficulty in SST’s integration through its logistical tasks, demanding designs, and lacking efficiency. After that, the paper defines an optimization strategy, through software-analyzed flight paths, for overall supersonic operations. This strategy was proven to shorten established SST flights by 6%, while enabling the implementation of newfound SST paths. Here, optimization averaged 3.3% on density-derived routes and 5.4% on software-derived routes. More importantly, this paper demonstrated routing optimization enables MACH 1.6 aircraft to achieve MACH 2 flight times. Further, this paper attempts to justify SST through an analysis of its market, financials, and social perspectives. With that, the paper justifies an ideal SST customer earns 630$/hr, while such measurements vary amongst flight types. Finally, this paper conceptualizes that SST, with optimization, promises a noteworthy business, while developments in aircraft designs may revamp the aerospace industry completely.

Date Created
2023-05
Agent

Manna: An Autonomously Guided Parachute Delivery System

Description

Mission aviation groups operate aircraft in areas with limited infrastructure. Existing airdrop methods pose significant risk due to their lack of steerability. This thesis details the development of Manna, a system built to address these concerns. Manna provides an automated,

Mission aviation groups operate aircraft in areas with limited infrastructure. Existing airdrop methods pose significant risk due to their lack of steerability. This thesis details the development of Manna, a system built to address these concerns. Manna provides an automated, low cost, safe steerable delivery platform, through a custom designed parafoil and guidance unit. Flight tests and simulations show that Manna can provide a safer alternative for critical air deliveries.

Date Created
2023-05
Agent

Manna: An Autonomously Guided Parachute Delivery System

Description

Mission aviation groups operate aircraft in areas with limited infrastructure. Existing airdrop methods pose significant risk due to their lack of steerability. This thesis details the development of Manna, a system built to address these concerns. Manna provides an automated,

Mission aviation groups operate aircraft in areas with limited infrastructure. Existing airdrop methods pose significant risk due to their lack of steerability. This thesis details the development of Manna, a system built to address these concerns. Manna provides an automated, low cost, safe steerable delivery platform, through a custom designed parafoil and guidance unit. Flight tests and simulations show that Manna can provide a safer alternative for critical air deliveries.

Date Created
2023-05
Agent

The Effects of Static Aeroelastic Properties on Aircraft Performance and Shockwave Formation

171534-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
As the push to develop ever more efficient aircraft increases, the use of lightweight composite materials to meet this push has increased. Traditional aircraft structural component sizing has revolved around the tensile yield strength of materials. Since composite materials excel

As the push to develop ever more efficient aircraft increases, the use of lightweight composite materials to meet this push has increased. Traditional aircraft structural component sizing has revolved around the tensile yield strength of materials. Since composite materials excel in tensile strength, these traditional sizing tools provide overly optimistic weight reduction predictions. Furthermore, composite materials, in general, are weak under compression and shear. Thus, proper structural sizing yields heavier-than-expected designs. Nevertheless, a wing using thin, lightweight composites in the primary load-bearing components significantly impacts its static aeroelastic properties. These thin structures have a decreased flexural rigidity, making them more susceptible to bending. The bending of swept wings decreases the design wing twist and dihedral angle, potentially impacting the aerodynamic performance and the lateral stability and control, respectively. This work aims to determine what, if any, are the effects of excessive static aeroelastic properties on the aerodynamic performance of an aircraft. Does the perceived gain in the theoretical reduction in structural weight outweigh the potential reduction in aerodynamic performance?
Date Created
2022
Agent

Robust Autopilot Control of a Ground Vehicle

Description

A robust autopilot control system for a ground vehicle was designed, fabricated, and implemented on a remote control car. The autopilot system consists of navigation, guidance, and three controller subsystems. The autopilot’s hardware subsystems are an Arduino processor, GPS receiver,

A robust autopilot control system for a ground vehicle was designed, fabricated, and implemented on a remote control car. The autopilot system consists of navigation, guidance, and three controller subsystems. The autopilot’s hardware subsystems are an Arduino processor, GPS receiver, 9 DOF inertial measurement system, and an SD card data logger. A complete system simulation was developed and used to verify the integrated design and algorithms, prior to field testing. The simulation results indicated the system performs as designed, with no anomalous behaviors observed. Simulations were also used to assess and verify each of the three controllers’ robustness qualities. The complete hardware system was field tested and verified fully functional against complex mission scenarios. The system performed as designed, with no anomalous behaviors observed. The system performed successfully in the presence of external disturbances (e.g., rocks, holes, dirt piles in the vehicle’s path), which demonstrated and verified the design is robust. Additional robustness testing consisted of doubling the vehicle’s polar moment of inertia and verifying this did not have any adverse effects on system performance. All the planned tasks were completed and the project’s objectives were met.

Date Created
2022-12
Agent