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2024 (1)

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Book
An evaluation of performance metrics for high efficiency tube-and-wing aircraft entering service in 2030-2035
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Year: 2011 Publisher: Cleveland, Ohio : National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Glenn Research Center,

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Book
On wings of the minimum induced drag : spanload implications for aircraft and birds
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Year: 2016 Publisher: Edwards, California : National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Armstrong Flight Research Center,

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Dissertation
Master thesis and internship[BR]- Master's thesis : The Impacts of Aspect Ratio Variations in Preliminary Design of a Mid-Range Jet Transport Aircraft[BR]- Internship
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Year: 2024 Publisher: Liège Université de Liège (ULiège)

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Reducing drag is an essential challenge in aeronautics. The lower the drag, the better the fuel efficiency of the aircraft. Indeed, the thrust generated by the engines is the force that balance the drag and can be reduced by reducing the drag. The aircraft drag comes from the fuselage, wing, tail and engine, however, the largest part of the drag comes from the wing. The total drag of the wing is the sum of the profile drag, composed on frictional and pressure drag, and the induced drag. The frictional drag is related to the surface area exposed to the flow and the pressure drag is related to the cross sectional area of the body. The induced drag is the 3 dimensional drag due to vortices at the wing tip. This last represents a large part of the total wing drag and can be reduced in two different ways: increase the Oswald factor, which means get as close as possible to an elliptical lift distribution, or increase the wing aspect ratio (AR), which is the ratio between the square of the span and the wing surface.
In this work, the second option is chosen and the studied aircraft is a mid-range jet transport aircraft concept developed by the German Aerospace Center DLR which has a baseline aspect ratio of 15.6. Three methods of aspect ratio increase are developed and the results obtained by each method are analysed and compared. cpacs-MONA, the computational framework developed by DLR, is used to generate the structural and aerodynamic finite element models thanks to ModGen and evaluate the aerodynamic, structural and aeroelastic characteristics of the aircraft thanks to MSC Nastran. Some methods to check the reliability of the results are used and a method based on Fourier series is implemented to compute the Oswald factor e and evaluate the more accurately the induced drag. One of the results of this AR investigation is that for an AR that increases from 15.6 to 16.8, the induced drag decrease from 5 to 10 %, depending on the chosen method.

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