The present invention relates to highly loaded frames of aircraft fuselages and, more particularly, to the frames which receive the loads of the vertical tail plane.
The load frames are structural elements within an aircraft fuselage that are characterized by the fact that they support and transfer specific local loads from other structural components such as the vertical tail plane, the horizontal tail plane and the wing. In addition they, of course, comply with the aircraft fuselage shaping and stiffening standard requirements.
Traditionally, load frames were made of metallic materials with different sections, the most common being I and J sections that, through machining processes, are provided with a network of nerves that stabilize the web of the frame.
Despite the tendency to extend the use of composite materials for most of the components of an aircraft due to the weight savings that this material entails with respect to metallic materials, in certain components, such as load frames, it is very difficult, due to their complexity, to achieve a composite material design that can compete both in weight and cost with current metallic designs.
The manufacturing of load frames with composite materials with a similar shape to metallic designs is possible but, apart from the cost resulting from the complexity of their design, it has, among others, the disadvantage that it is very difficult to get optimized laminates for supporting the required loads with these designs, which means not being competitive in weight.
In the case of load frames it is very difficult to compete with the machined metal frames because, due to the high and different loads they shall support, the alternative composite material frames often pose various manufacturing problems due to their rather complex design, with big section changes and areas where all kinds of fabric orientations in the laminate are needed.
Some proposals in this respect are known such as those disclosed in patent applications WO 2008/092970, U.S. 2009/0026315, WO 2009/030731 and EP 2 343 237, but the aeronautic industry continues to demand load frames of composite materials that can compete successfully with metal frames.
The present invention is directed to the attention of that demand.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a load frame for aircraft fuselages that can be made entirely from composite materials or other materials and that can be competitive in cost and weight with traditional metallic frames.
This and other objects are achieved by a frame of a fuselage section of an aircraft that receives external loads comprising a first sector configured specifically to withstand these external loads and a second sector along the remaining perimeter of the fuselage, where the first sector comprises the following structural elements: a) a foot piece to be joined to the fuselage skin; b) a head piece, c) a web comprising one or more fitting-pieces for receiving said external loads and a plurality of X-shaped pieces joined by their ends to said foot piece and said head piece, d) two connecting pieces of the ends of said foot piece and said head piece with the second sector of the frame.
Therefore, these structural elements have features that allow, on the one hand, making each of them with appropriate materials for their individual functionalities and, on the other hand, different levels of integration of the manufacturing process, including a fully integrated manufacturing process.
In one embodiment of the invention, the web of the first sector of the frame may further comprise radial struts attached to the foot piece and to the head piece. Two structural elements for the web of the frame are therefore available.
The X-shaped pieces can be made of two equal rods joined by their center or of unitary pieces with, particularly, a double T-shaped cross section.
In one embodiment of the invention, all structural elements are made of composite material. Different types of composite materials and manufacturing processes/technologies can be used for the different structural elements, allowing an optimization in weight and cost.
In one embodiment of the invention, the X-shaped pieces and, if present, the additional struts, are joined to the foot piece and to the head piece by a chemical bond. Thus, in this embodiment the various pieces are made separately and joined using techniques such as co-bonding or co-injection.
In on embodiment of the invention where the structural elements of the first sector of the frame are manufactured separately and then bonded chemically, the head piece is formed by two C-shaped sub-pieces whose webs are attached to said X-shaped pieces and the foot piece has a it shape, with said X-shaped pieces being joined to its webs. The foot piece of this frame may further comprise transverse stiffeners of its webs.
In one embodiment of the invention, the X-shaped pieces and, if present, the additional struts, are joined to the foot piece and to the head piece by a mechanical joint. Thus, in this embodiment the various pieces are made separately and joined by one or more fasteners such as, for example, rivets or bolts, for which purpose, such X-shaped pieces and, if present, the additional struts are preferably configured with a lug at each end to facilitate the joint.
In on embodiment of the invention where the structural elements of the first sector of the frame are manufactured separately and then mechanically joined, the X-shaped pieces are attached to the web of the T-shaped foot piece with stiffened webs and to the web of the C-shaped head piece.
In on embodiment of the invention where the structural elements of the first sector of the frame are manufactured separately and then mechanically joined, the foot piece is T-shaped, the head piece is L-shaped and the X-shaped pieces are arranged in two sets at both sides of the webs of the foot piece and the head piece.
The frame object of the invention is, preferably, a frame located on the rear fuselage of the aircraft that receives the loads from the vertical tail plane.
Other characteristics and advantages of the present invention will be clear from the following detailed description of embodiments illustrative of its object in relation to the attached figures.
a is a perspective view of the rear section of an aircraft where the load frames that withstand the loads induced by the vertical tail plane and the horizontal tail plane are located,
a is a schematic perspective view showing the first sector of a load frame according to an embodiment of the present invention in an aircraft fuselage and
a and 4b are front and cross-section views of a first embodiment of the fitting-pieces included in the first sector of the load frame.
a, 6b, 6c, 6d, 6e are schematic cross sectional views of different configurations of the first sector of the load frame.
a and 7b are front views of two embodiments of the X-shaped pieces used in the first sector of a load frame and
a, 8b, 8c are schematic front views illustrating three embodiments of joints between the web piece and the foot piece of the first sector of the load frame.
The load frames object of the present invention are frames located in areas of the fuselage that receive large external local loads from other components of the aircraft structure such as the metal frames 1 located at the rear section 2 of and aircraft fuselage (see
These metal frames 1, well known in the aeronautic industry, comprise a first sector 6 with load receiving zones 9 and a web with zones 7, 8 stiffened with nerves in two directions.
To be fully competitive with metallic frames, the sector of the load frame that receives external local loads (in the rest of the frame there are no substantial differences between load frames and shape frames) is structured by a set of parts made of composite material, to facilitate, on the one hand, the optimization of the laminates and to allow, on the other hand, the weight optimization.
Each of these parts must meet different structural requirements which facilitate their individual optimization in weight and cost. In this regard, it should be noted that within this sector of the frame, such requirements vary along its perimeter involving, in principle, changes in the cross section and thickness variations of the laminates which can be attended to in a more optimized way if they are addressed individually for each of these parts instead of at a global level.
a and 2b show a first sector 11 of a load frame that receives external local loads. The rest of frame, corresponding to a second sector 12, which is conventional, is schematically illustrated. The load frame according to this invention is arranged transversely to the fuselage skin 13, stiffened by stringers 14.
In said sector 11, the load frame comprise:
The division of the sector 11 of the frame in the above-mentioned pieces allows the optimization of their corresponding laminates according to the loads to be supported by each one of them. In this way, sharing the load frame requirements between the different pieces in which the frame is structured allows achieving an easier manufacture and therefore a cost reduction.
With the above-mentioned structure, various manufacturing possibilities of the sector 11 of the frame are envisaged, from a separate manufacturing of each of the above pieces and their assembly by means of mechanical joints, to a manufacturing with higher levels of integration using, for example, co-curing and/or co-injecting processes. In this regard it should be understood that the meaning of the term “piece”, as used in this invention, includes the meaning given in the technology of composite materials to the term “preform”: an item that requires an individual laminating process to conform it with certain characteristics and that is intended to be integrated with other elements in the manufacturing process of the product to which it belongs.
In the embodiment of the invention illustrated in
a and 4b show the configuration of a flat unitary fitting-piece 27 which receives the external loads applied to the fittings 28 attached to it by the vertical tail plane, which corresponds to the embodiment illustrated in
c and 6d show two embodiments of the invention with different configurations of the foot piece 21, the head piece 23 and the X-shaped pieces 31 oriented toward a chemical bonding (i.e. a union achieved by techniques such as the co-curing, the co-bonding or the co-injection) between them.
The foot piece 21 has a π-shape and the head piece 23 is formed by two C-shaped sub-pieces. The ends of the X-shaped pieces 31 are attached, respectively, to the two webs 22, 22′ of the foot piece 21 and to the two webs 24, 24′ of the head piece 23.
In the case of
a, 6b and 6e show three embodiments of the invention with different configurations of the foot piece 21, the head piece 23 and the X-shaped pieces 31 oriented toward a mechanical joint between them made with fasteners such as rivets.
In the case of
In the case of
All configurations mentioned allow variations of the size and thickness of the above pieces along the perimeter of the sector 11 of the frame, thus enabling its optimization in weight and cost.
The X-shaped piece 31 may be formed by two independent rods 33, 33′ joined in their central part by means of a rivet or a bolt, as shown in
The ends of said X-shape pieces of X 31 and said struts 32 can be configured with lugs 35 to facilitate their joining to the head piece 23 as illustrated in
Although the present invention is preferably focused to frames entirely made of a composite material, it also comprises frames in which the above-mentioned parts are made of metallic materials.
Although the present invention has been described in connection with various embodiments, it will be appreciated from the specification that various combinations of elements, variations or improvements therein may be made, and are within the scope of the invention.
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