scholarly journals A Novel Control Allocation Method for Yaw Control of Tailless Aircraft

Aerospace ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (10) ◽  
pp. 150
Author(s):  
Thomas R. Shearwood ◽  
Mostafa R. A. Nabawy ◽  
William J. Crowther ◽  
Clyde Warsop

Tailless aircraft without vertical stabilisers typically use drag effectors in the form of spoilers or split flaps to generate control moments in yaw. This paper introduces a novel control allocation method by which full three-axis control authority can be achieved by the use of conventional lift effectors only, which reduces system complexity and control deflection required to achieve a given yawing moment. The proposed method is based on synthesis of control allocation modes that generate asymmetric profile and lift induced drag whilst maintaining the lift, pitching moment and rolling moment at the trim state. The method uses low order models for aerodynamic behaviour characterisation based on thin aerofoil theory, lifting surface methodology and ESDU datasheets and is applied to trapezoidal wings of varying sweep and taper. Control allocation modes are derived using the zero-sets of surrogate models for the characterised aerodynamic behaviours. Results are presented in the form of control allocations for a range of trimmed sideslip angles up to 10 degrees optimised for either maximum aerodynamic efficiency (minimum drag for a specific yawing moment) or minimum aggregate control deflection (as a surrogate observability metric). Outcomes for the two optimisation objectives are correlated in that minimum deflection solutions are always consistent with efficient ones. A configuration with conventional drag effector is used as a reference baseline. It is shown that, through appropriate allocation of lift based control effectors, a given yawing moment can be produced with up to a factor of eight less aggregate control deflection and up to 30% less overall drag compared to use of a conventional drag effector.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas R. Shearwood ◽  
Mostafa R. Nabawy ◽  
William Crowther ◽  
Clyde Warsop

2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (20) ◽  
pp. 3847-3872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giulio Molinari ◽  
Andres F Arrieta ◽  
Paolo Ermanni

Tailless swept wing airplanes rely on variations of the spanwise lift distribution to achieve controllability in all axes. As every flight condition requires different control moments, the conventional discrete control surfaces will be practically continuously deflected, leading to drag penalties. Shape adaptation base on chordwise morphing can achieve continuous deformations of the wing profile, leading to local lift variations with minimum drag penalties. As the shape is varied continuously along the wingspan, the lift distribution can be tailored to each flight condition. Tailless aircraft appear therefore as prime candidates for morphing, as the attainable benefits are potentially significant. This work presents a methodology to determine the optimal planform, profile shape, and morphing structure for a tailless aircraft. The employed morphing concept is based on a distributed compliance structure, actuated by piezoelectric elements. The multidisciplinary optimization considers the static and dynamic aeroelastic behavior of the structure and aims to maximize the aerodynamic efficiency of the plane while guaranteeing its controllability by means of morphing. The potential of the resulting wing design is fully exploited by means of a second optimization process, which identifies the actuation configuration resulting in the highest aerodynamic efficiency for a wide variety of control moments.


ICCAS 2010 ◽  
2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Van Phuoc Bui ◽  
Jeong Soon Jeong ◽  
Dong Seok Lee ◽  
Young Bok Kim ◽  
Kwon Soon Lee

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