This application claims the benefit of the European patent application No. 18382811.0 filed on Nov. 16, 2018, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by way of reference.
A first aspect of the present invention relates to a frame assembly for a rear section of an aircraft for attaching a vertical tail plane (hereinafter VTP) to at least one frame of the rear section of an aircraft, having application in the technical field of aeronautics, allowing a more effective transfer of loads coming from the VTP to the fuselage. A second aspect of the present invention relates to a rear section of an aircraft comprising the frame assembly of the first aspect.
Nowadays, considering any of the different ways used for attaching the VTP to the fuselage of the aircraft, the loads coming from the VTP are directly transferred to the upper part of the tail cone structure, since it is the closest area to the aforementioned VTP. Therefore, the main part of these loads end up in a small area of the skin and frames of the fuselage.
There are two main ways for attaching the VTP to the tail cone structure, by means of shear joints or tension joints.
The most common way to transfer the VTP loads is by shear joints made up of a series of fittings, usually two per frame in the fuselage side and another two in the VTP side. Such a solution has been represented in
Another possibility is the use of tension joints as shown in
The main drawback, common in both ways, is the high out of plane forces and stress concentrations, in a small area of the upper zone of skin and frames of the fuselage, which leads to very thick and heavy structural components, for instance high loaded frames made of machined or forged metal. In case of hybrid configurations, further thermal loads are present.
The present invention relates to a frame assembly for a rear section of an aircraft comprising a frame intended to be fixed to a vertical tail plane having a plane of symmetry, which normally remains in a vertical position when attached to the fuselage of the aircraft. When the aircraft is in use, the loads supported by the vertical tail plane lead to a variable orientation.
According to the invention, the frame assembly also comprises at least one supporting element, having two ends, wherein each of the ends of the at least one supporting element is attached to the same frame and each of the ends is located at a different side of the plane of symmetry when the vertical tail plane is attached to the rear section.
The operative connection between the vertical tail plane and the supporting element envisages any connection able to transmission of the loads from the vertical tail plane to the supporting elements, i.e., fittings, bolts, rivets, joints and the like.
Therefore, the invention allows the carrying or transferring of the loads to a lower position and sending the loads towards both sides of every frame, dividing the whole load in these two lateral areas and increasing the moment arm. This avoids the high out of plane forces and stress concentrations in the upper zone of skin and frames typical of the state of the art configurations, which leads to very thick and heavy structural components. Thus, according to the invention, VTP loads are redistributed in a more efficient way by reacting them at both sides of the tail cone structure, increasing the moment arm and the surface area where these loads can be shared out. Therefore, the invention allows much lighter frames, plus the supporting element, which is bi-clamped to both frame sides.
The advantages yielded by the invention proposed can be summarized as follows:
1. Improvement of the transfer load between VTP and tail cone structure, transforming the important skin out of plane forces into shear forces. This is possible because of the new load reacting areas (lateral areas), where the shear force component is more important than the out of plane one.
2. Improvement of the skin efficiency by increasing the skin working surface (more skin area to react the load).
3. More membrane and lower out of plane loads in the upper area of the tail cone leads to a skin less prone to delamination, etc.
4. Due to the out of plane loads reduction, lesser thicknesses will be required for the frames, making it easier to manufacture these high loaded frames in composite materials (removing metallic parts), so one way assembly processes can be considered and typical thermal loads from hybrid configurations are removed. Furthermore, in the particular case of manufacturing the supporting element in carbon, fatigue problems are overcome and maintenance costs are reduced.
5. Important weight savings (due to skin and frame thickness reduction). When the supporting element is manufactured in carbon, thermal loads are avoided and the overall weight is reduced.
For a better comprehension of the invention, the following drawings are provided for illustrative and non-limiting purposes, wherein:
As depicted in
In turn, each of the ends (3′) is located at a different side of the plane of symmetry (4) of the vertical tail plane (1) when attached to the fuselage.
Preferably, according to a first embodiment depicted in
Each of the ends (3′) of the at least one supporting element (3) is attached to an inner side (2′) of the same frame (2). As can be appreciated in
The at least one supporting element (3) is perpendicular to the plane of symmetry (4), and the vertical tail plane (1) is operatively connected to the at least one supporting element (3) by means of auxiliary elements (5).
As shown in
According to this embodiment, the auxiliary element (5) has a rectangular upper area configured to receive the vertical tail plane, and two lower supports, each of them being operatively connected to one supporting element (3). Preferably both supporting elements (3) are adjacent, placed opposite each other. In turn, each of the supporting elements (3) can be formed by two plates and each lower support can engage between the two plates, the connection being made by means of riveting or bolts.
The at least one supporting element (3) is perpendicular to the plane of symmetry (4), and the vertical tail plane (1) is operatively connected to the at least one supporting element (3) by means of auxiliary elements (5) comprising metallic fittings.
According to the second embodiment longitudinal longerons (8) are required, whose purpose is to connect the planes of the frames (2) affected by the introduction of this concept, in order to transfer the longitudinal load and avoid big deformations in X direction. These new parts are necessary due to the absence of contact between the upper skin and the frames. In the first embodiment represented in
Additionally, in order to avoid the kink between the supporting element (3) and the VTP spars (7) (third embodiment), the supporting element (3) and frames (2) to which the supporting element (3) is connected can be slanted in order to make coincident frames planes with the VTP spars planes.
In the third embodiment, longitudinal longerons (8) may also be required for the same purpose as in the first embodiment.
Thus, the main components of the proposed invention are:
the supporting element (3), whose main task is to react to the loads and send them to the right and left hand sides of the structure in shear direction;
auxiliary elements (5), such as metallic fittings or composite panels, in order to transfer the loads from the VTP to the aforementioned supporting element (3);
and, for the second and the third embodiments, additional longitudinal longerons (8) to connect the planes of the frames (2) affected by the invention, in order to transfer the longitudinal load and avoid large deformations in X direction.
The invention impacts in several engineering parameters with respect to current known solutions:
Weight. The invention allows an overall weight decrease given by frames and skin, although there is a smaller addition of the supporting elements (horizontal beams) and/or the auxiliary elements (VTP extensions).
Manufacturing and assembly processes: The highly complex machined High loaded frames (HLFs) are replaced by new simpler composite elements (supporting elements, ‘C’ or ‘Double C’ Frames, auxiliary elements . . . ). Because of carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) design, one way assembly processes can be targeted for the whole rear fuselage section, which reduces significant assembly time and therefore provides a recurring cost reduction. Additionally, in the second version of the concept (with VTP fittings) there is no connection between the skin and neither the fittings nor the frame/supporting element in the upper area, so the assembly operations in this zone are simplified.
Materials: All main structure in this concept could be made of CFRP. So, no thermal loads and therefore weight decrease.
Maintainability: No inspections are needed for CFRP elements. Metallic fittings do not have any accessibility problems.
While at least one exemplary embodiment of the present invention(s) is disclosed herein, it should be understood that modifications, substitutions and alternatives may be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art and can be made without departing from the scope of this disclosure. This disclosure is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the exemplary embodiment(s). In addition, in this disclosure, the terms “comprise” or “comprising” do not exclude other elements or steps, the terms “a” or “one” do not exclude a plural number, and the term “or” means either or both. Furthermore, characteristics or steps which have been described may also be used in combination with other characteristics or steps and in any order unless the disclosure or context suggests otherwise. This disclosure hereby incorporates by reference the complete disclosure of any patent or application from which it claims benefit or priority.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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18382811.0 | Nov 2018 | EP | regional |