Control of forward swept wing configurations dominated by flight-dynamic/aeroelastic interactions
暂无分享,去创建一个
An active control system concept for an aeroelastic wind-tunnel model of a statically unstable FSW configuration with wing-mounted stores is developed to provide acceptable longitudinal flying qualities while maintaining adequate flutter speed margin. On FSW configurations, the inherent aeroelastic wing divergence tendency causes strong flight-dynamic/aeroelastic interactions that in certain cases can produce a dynamic instability known as body-freedom flutter (BFF). The carriage of wing-mounted stores is shown to severely aggravate this problem. The control system developed combines a canard-based SAS with an Active Divergence/Flutter Suppression (ADFS) system which relies on wing-mounted sensors and a trailing-edge device (flaperon). Synergism between these two systems is exploited to obtain the flying qualities and flutter speed objectives.
[1] M. Rimer,et al. Divergence/flutter suppression system for a forward swept-wing configuration with wing-mounted stores , 1984 .
[2] D. E. Bischoff. The definition of short-period flying qualities characteristics via equivalent systems , 1983 .
[3] J. H. Wykes,et al. Rigid-body structural mode coupling on a forward swept wing aircraft , 1983 .
[4] Richard R. Chipman,et al. ACTIVE CONTROL OF AEROELASTIC DIVERGENCE , 1982 .