Constant Altitude-Constant Mach Number Cruise Range of Transport Aircraft with Compressibility Effects

2006 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aydan Cavcar
2012 ◽  
Vol 225 ◽  
pp. 397-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erwin Sulaeman

To maintain flight safety, all transport aircraft designs should satisfy airworthiness standard regulation. One fundamental issue of the aircraft design that relates directly to flight safety as well as commercial aspect of the aircraft is on the evaluation of the maximum speed within the designated flight envelope. In the present work, a study is performed to evaluate the negative altitude requirement related to aeroelastic instability analysis as one requirement that should be fulfilled to design the maximum speed. An analytical derivation to obtain the negative altitude is performed based on the airworthiness requirement that a transport airplane must be designed to be free from aeroelastic instability within the flight envelope encompassed by the dive speed or dive Mach number versus altitude envelope enlarged at all points by an increase of 15% in equivalent airspeed at both constant Mach number and constant altitude. To take into account variation in atmospheric condition as function of altitude, the international standard regulation is used as referenced. The analysis result shows that a single negative altitude can be obtained using these criteria regardless of the dive speed or dive Mach number. A further discussion on the application of the negative altitude concept to UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle), in relation to UAV Standard Airworthiness Requirement STANAG 4671, is presented.


1954 ◽  
Vol 58 (517) ◽  
pp. 61-64
Author(s):  
R. G. Taylor

Two design conditions for an axial flow compressor stage are proposed and examined. These are, the constant reaction condition (incorporating I “ radial equilibrium ”), and the condition that the Mach number at inlet to the rotor shall be invariant with radius. In addition, the combination of these two properties in one stage is considered. It is found, with further assumptions regarding the nature of the flow, that a forced vortex type of flow will satisfy both design specifications. The forced vortex solutions for the various cases are presented, and for constant Mach number at inlet to the rotor, more general solutions are given.


2000 ◽  
Vol 421 ◽  
pp. 229-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
JONATHAN B. FREUND ◽  
SANJIVA K. LELE ◽  
PARVIZ MOIN

This work uses direct numerical simulations of time evolving annular mixing layers, which correspond to the early development of round jets, to study compressibility effects on turbulence in free shear flows. Nine cases were considered with convective Mach numbers ranging from Mc = 0.1 to 1.8 and turbulence Mach numbers reaching as high as Mt = 0.8.Growth rates of the simulated mixing layers are suppressed with increasing Mach number as observed experimentally. Also in accord with experiments, the mean velocity difference across the layer is found to be inadequate for scaling most turbulence statistics. An alternative scaling based on the mean velocity difference across a typical large eddy, whose dimension is determined by two-point spatial correlations, is proposed and validated. Analysis of the budget of the streamwise component of Reynolds stress shows how the new scaling is linked to the observed growth rate suppression. Dilatational contributions to the budget of turbulent kinetic energy are found to increase rapidly with Mach number, but remain small even at Mc = 1.8 despite the fact that shocklets are found at high Mach numbers. Flow visualizations show that at low Mach numbers the mixing region is dominated by large azimuthally correlated rollers whereas at high Mach numbers the flow is dominated by small streamwise oriented structures. An acoustic timescale limitation for supersonically deforming eddies is found to be consistent with the observations and scalings and is offered as a possible explanation for the decrease in transverse lengthscale.


2007 ◽  
Vol 111 (1126) ◽  
pp. 797-806 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Doig ◽  
T. J. Barber ◽  
E. Leonardi ◽  
A. J. Neely

Abstract The influence of flow compressibility on a highly-cambered inverted aerofoil in ground effect is presented, based on two-dimensional computational studies. This type of problem has relevance to open-wheel racing cars, where local regions of high-speed subsonic flow form under favourable pressure gradients, even though the maximum freestream Mach number is typically considerably less than Mach 0·3. An important consideration for CFD users in this field is addressed in this paper: the freestream Mach number at which flow compressibility significantly affects aerodynamic performance. More broadly, for aerodynamicists, the consequences of this are also considered. Comparisons between incompressible and compressible CFD simulations are used to identify important changes to the flow characteristics caused by density changes, highlighting the inappropriateness of incompressible simulations of ground effect flows for freestream Mach numbers as low as 0·15.


1996 ◽  
Vol 313 ◽  
pp. 131-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Shajii ◽  
J. P. Freidberg

The properties of a relatively uncommon regime of fluid dynamics, low Mach number compressible flow are investigated. This regime, which is characterized by an exceptionally large channel aspect ratio L/d ∼ 106 leads to highly subsonic flows in which friction dominates inertia. Even so, because of the large aspect ratio, finite pressure, temperature, and density gradients are required, implying that compressibility effects are also important. Analytical results are presented which show, somewhat unexpectedly, that for forced channel flow, steady-state solutions exist only below a critical value of heat input. Above this value the flow reverses against the direction of the applied pressure gradient causing fluid to leave both the inlet and outlet implying that the related concepts of a steady-state friction factor and heat transfer coefficient have no validity.


2007 ◽  
Vol 111 (1122) ◽  
pp. 531-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Filippone

Abstract The paper reviews the issue of cruise Mach number and addresses the benefits of operating subsonic commercial aircraft at speeds below the long-range cruise speed. The case considered is the flight of transport aircraft for flight segments up to 1,000nm. It is shown that the fuel burned is decreased by as much as 1·8% on a nominal 1,000nm stage length for operation around the long-range cruise Mach number, or below. This is achieved at a cost of a marginal delay on each flight segment (less than three minutes). The longer flight time is likely not to affect the daily operation of the aircraft. The fuel saving is compounded, because the gross take-off weight (GTOW) is recalculated to take into account the reduced fuel consumption at each flight segment. The analysis into the environmental benefits includes the reduction in,andemissions, and the heat released in the high atmosphere. Sensitivity analyses are carried out on the take-off weight, on the aerodynamic coefficients, on the transonic drag rise and the weight uncertainty. It is predicted that the optimal operation of the example aircraft over a nominal 1,000nm route can reduce the fuel consumption by as much as 150,000kg per year in comparison with an operation at the long-range Mach number. The aircraft model has a maximum take-off weight of 170,000kg and is powered by two GE CF6-80C2 engines.


2010 ◽  
Vol 660 ◽  
pp. 499-526 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. MELIGA ◽  
D. SIPP ◽  
J.-M. CHOMAZ

We study the linear dynamics of global eigenmodes in compressible axisymmetric wake flows, up to the high subsonic regime. We consider both an afterbody flow at zero angle of attack and a sphere, and find that the sequence of bifurcations destabilizing the axisymmetric steady flow is independent of the Mach number and reminiscent of that documented in the incompressible wake past a sphere and a disk (Natarajan & Acrivos, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 254, 1993, p. 323), hence suggesting that the onset of unsteadiness in this class of flows results from a global instability. We determine the boundary separating the stable and unstable domains in the (M, Re) plane, and show that an increase in the Mach number yields a stabilization of the afterbody flow, but a destabilization of the sphere flow. These compressible effects are further investigated by means of adjoint-based sensitivity analyses relying on the computation of gradients or sensitivity functions. Using this theoretical formalism, we show that they do not act through specific compressibility effects at the disturbance level but mainly through implicit base flow modifications, an effect that had not been taken into consideration by previous studies based on prescribed parallel base flow profiles. We propose a physical interpretation for the observed compressible effects, based on the competition between advection and production of disturbances, and provide evidence linking the stabilizing/destabilizing effect observed when varying the Mach number to a strengthening/weakening of the disturbance advection mechanism. We show, in particular, that the destabilizing effect of compressibility observed in the case of the sphere results from a significant increase of the backflow velocity in the whole recirculating bubble, which opposes the downstream advection of disturbances.


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