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Topic Name: Airplane Design:Better Flight-control Systems, Safer, Cheaper, And Greener
Category: Aeronautical
Research persons: Professor Arthur Rizzi
Location: Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan, SE-100 44 Stockholm, Sweden
Details
A new EU project, coordinated by the
Royal
Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden, is to develop a new
computer-aided holistic solution for the early phase of aircraft design.
With knowledge from many fields, it is possible to propose the right solution
for the aircraft's control system at an early stage. This reduces the risk of
wasted efforts on faulty designs, which entails lower developmental costs and
enhanced safety.
When a new airplane is projected, designers need knowledge and competence
from many disciplines in order to make the right decisions about the plane's
complex and intricately interactive systems and functions.
The EU project "Simulating
aircraft stability and control characteristics for use in conceptual design"
(SimSAC) is intended to facilitate the coordination of this knowledge.
"New airplanes must meet rigorous requirements for energy efficiency,
environmental friendliness, aviation safety, and high performance at a low
operational cost. Early multidisciplinary work that is followed up throughout
the developmental process is an indispensable tool," says Arthur Rizzi,
professor at the Department of Aeronautical and Vehicle Engineering,
Royal
Institute of Technology, in Sweden and one of those behind the project and
now coordinating it.
A control system with the right features is necessary for the safe and
efficient operation of aircraft. But today control systems are usually
constructed only after the main features of the plane have been determined,
often using handbook and experiential data as a basis. By including the control
system earlier in the developmental process, you increase the chances of getting
it right the first time.
"Up to 80 percent of the total cost of an airplane's life cycle is set during
the early design phase, so mistakes are expensive. Faulty assumptions about
stability and control lead to costly and failed test flights. This can involve
the loss of prototypes and, in the worst case, human life. To minimize risks,
multidisciplinary analyses should be introduced early in the developmental
process, and decisions should be based more on simulations than on empirical
data," says Arthur Rizzi.
To meet these challenges, 17 leading representatives of the
European academic community and the aeronautics industry from nine countries
will now be collaborating in the SimSAC project. Sweden is represented by, along
with the Royal Institute of Technology, the
Swedish Defense Research Agency and SAAB Aerosystems. The initiative for the
project came from the Royal Institute of Technology and EADS (Germany), which
are both active in the field of developing designs and products that are
"first-time right."
"We Europeans must step up our competence in the field, since Europe has
fallen behind the U.S. Competition is also increasing from the growing Asian
aeronautics industry, and this interdisciplinary project is designed to help
Europe regain the lead," says
Arthur Rizzi.
When the project concludes in October 2009, Arthur Rizzi counts on having
produced a tailor-made environment of aircraft design, with support both for how
better design should be carried out and for producing the best possible data for
decision-making.
About Researcher:
Professor
Arthur Rizzi
Department of Aeronautical and Vehicle Engineering
Division of Aerodynamics
Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan (KTH)
SE-100 44 Stockholm, Sweden
Phone: +46-8-790 76 00
Fax: +46-8-20 76 20
E-mail: rizzi@kth.se
Ralated Important Links:
Aircraft flight control systems
High Plains Engineering
Primary Flight Control Systems
Intelligent Flight Control System
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