This application claims the benefit of the French patent application No. 13 61524 filed on Nov. 22, 2013, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by way of reference.
The present invention relates to the field of aircraft fuselages made of composite material.
It relates to a fuselage portion for an aircraft, such as a forward section in particular, in which the circumferential frames each have a soleplate applied continuously onto the fuselage skin. Such circumferential frames are commonly called “integral frames.”
The invention is particularly advantageously applicable in the case of a forward section without stringers.
One difficulty encountered in the production of aircraft fuselages lies in the operation of assembling the circumferential frames with the fuselage skin in the case where the circumferential frames each have a soleplate in contact with the fuselage skin.
This is because this operation requires the filling of the various interstices between the soleplate of each circumferential frame and the fuselage skin, resulting from the manufacturing tolerances of these elements.
These interstices are all the greater when the fuselage skin has many regions of different thicknesses, corresponding to greater or lesser force levels to be supported.
The interstices are generally filled using solid blocks or a hardenable resin.
The operation is tedious and costly in time, in particular in the second case because of a polymerization time which generally extends to several hours.
However, to the manufacturing tolerances there is added a tolerance ε linked to the positioning of the soleplate 20 of the circumferential frame relative to the fuselage skin 12 and to the uncertainties concerning the position of the foot of the ply drop-off inherent in the methods for manufacturing skins in composite materials, as shown in
This positioning tolerance ε induces a clearance J2 at the ply drop-off 18, all the more marked as the slope of this ply drop-off increases.
In the example illustrated, in which the slope of the ply drop-off 18 is equal to 1/20 and the positioning tolerance ε is equal to 12 mm, the clearance J2 thus reaches 0.6 mm.
However, a reduction of the slope of the ply drop-off 18 proves to be undesirable, in the context of the conventional fuselage portions, because of the significant increase in mass evolving from such a slope reduction.
An aim of the invention is notably to provide a simple, economical and effective solution to this problem that makes it possible to make the operations of assembling the circumferential frames and the fuselage skins easier and more rapid, notably with respect to the forward sections.
To this end, the invention proposes a fuselage portion in composite material for an aircraft, comprising a fuselage skin comprising at least two regions of different constant thicknesses, namely a first region of greater thickness, and a second region of lesser thickness, said regions being separated from one another by a ply drop-off.
According to the invention, said ply drop-off comprises at least two portions having different slopes each oriented in a circumferential direction orthogonal to a longitudinal direction of said fuselage portion, namely a first portion having a greater slope and a second portion having a lesser slope, the first and second portions being arranged on one and the same circumferential side relative to the first region.
The slopes of the first and second portions are thus oriented in the same direction.
The invention thus proposes using a ply drop-off in two or more portions, in which the second portion has a relatively small slope allowing to reduce the assembly clearance with the soleplate of a circumferential frame, whereas the first portion has a relatively steep slope making it possible to limit the mass of said fuselage portion.
The invention preferably exhibits one or more of the optional features described below.
Said slope of said first portion of said first ply drop-off is advantageously greater than or equal to 1/20 whereas said slope of said second portion of said first ply drop-off is advantageously less than or equal to 1/40 and preferably less than or equal to 1/70.
The fuselage portion advantageously further comprises a first circumferential frame extending in a plane orthogonal to said longitudinal direction and comprising a soleplate applied to said regions of constant thickness and to said second portion of said first ply drop-off.
Said second portion of said first ply drop-off advantageously has a width between 1 times and 1.5 times the width of said soleplate of said first circumferential frame.
The fuselage portion advantageously further comprises a second circumferential frame extending in a plane orthogonal to said longitudinal direction and comprising a soleplate applied to said regions of constant thickness and to a fourth portion of said first ply drop-off similar to said second portion of said first ply drop-off and separated from said second portion by a third portion of said first ply drop-off similar to said first portion thereof.
Said fuselage skin advantageously comprises a third region of constant thickness having a thickness less than the thickness of said second region, said third region being connected to said second region by a second ply drop-off comprising at least two portions having different slopes each oriented in said circumferential direction, namely a first portion having a greater slope and a second portion having a lesser slope, the latter slope being less than said slope of said second region of said first ply drop-off, and the first and second portions of the second ply drop-off being arranged on one and the same circumferential side relative to the second region.
The fuselage portion is advantageously intended to form a forward section of an aircraft.
The invention relates also to a forward section of an aircraft, comprising a fuselage portion of the type described above.
The invention relates finally to an aircraft, comprising a fuselage portion of the type described above.
The invention will be better understood, and other details, advantages and features thereof will become apparent on reading the following description given as a nonlimiting example and with reference to the attached drawings in which:
In all these figures, identical references can denote identical or analogous elements.
This fuselage portion 110 comprises a fuselage skin 112 in composite material and circumferential frames 113 intended to rigidify the fuselage skin 112, in a manner known per se.
In the example illustrated, the fuselage portion 110 has no stringers, that is to say longitudinal stiffeners. The rigidity of the fuselage skin 112 is thus obtained through the thickness of this skin, in a manner known to those skilled in the art.
As in the example of
The first region 114 is connected to the second region 116 by a first ply drop-off 118, whereas the second region 116 is connected to the third region 117 by a second ply drop-off 119.
According to a particular feature of the present invention, the first ply drop-off 118 comprises a plurality of portions having different slopes oriented in the circumferential direction C, in the same direction about the axis 111, for example in the counter-clockwise direction when the fuselage portion 110 is seen from the rear, that is to say when it is seen from right to left in
Thus,
As
However, in the example illustrated, the slope of the second and fourth portions 134, 138 is equal to approximately 1/100, and is therefore less than the slope of the second and fourth portions 126, 130 of the first ply drop-off 118.
As can be seen in
As illustrated in
Thus, in the worst case, that can be seen in
On the other hand, the first 124, 132 and the third 128, 136 portions of each of the ply drop-offs 118, 119 correspond to areas of the fuselage skin 112 situated between the circumferential frames, in which the greater slope makes it possible to limit the overall mass of the fuselage portion 110.
The second portions 126, 134 and the fourth portions 130, 138 of the ply drop-offs 118, 119 can be produced concomitantly with the fuselage skin 112. In each of these portions with relatively shallow slope, the orientation of the fibers of each ply is determined as a function of the circumferential extent and of the longitudinal extent of the ply within the ply drop-off considered, and as a function of a minimum lay-up length imposed by the toolage used. Preferably, the ply drop-offs comprise an alternation of plies comprising fibers oriented at 90 degrees and of plies comprising fibers oriented at zero degrees.
In particular, for a ply P1 of the region 114 to be extended having fibers oriented at 45 degrees or at 135 degrees (
For a ply P1 of the region 114 to be extended that has fibers oriented at 90 degrees (
Similarly, for a ply P1 of the region 114 to be extended that has fibers oriented at zero degrees (
Generally, the invention therefore makes it possible to reduce the clearances induced by the manufacturing tolerances, at the point of contact between the soleplate of each circumferential frame and the fuselage skin in a fuselage portion for an aircraft, while limiting the mass of the fuselage portion.
It should be noted that, in the example illustrated, the absence of stringers makes it possible to obtain a fuselage skin 112 totally without steps at the level of each of the circumferential frames 113.
As is apparent from the foregoing specification, the invention is susceptible of being embodied with various alterations and modifications which may differ particularly from those that have been described in the preceding specification and description. It should be understood that I wish to embody within the scope of the patent warranted hereon all such modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of my contribution to the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1361524 | Nov 2013 | FR | national |