The present invention pertains generally to propulsion and flight control units. In particular, the present invention pertains to cycloidal propulsion and flight control units incorporating airfoil blades that are rotated to create a thrust vector. The present invention is particularly, but not exclusively, useful as a system and method for creating and controlling thrust vectors through hydraulic control of the orientation of the airfoil blades.
For atmospheric flight by heavier-than-air vehicles, it is well known that airfoils can be used in various ways to either propel or control the flight of the vehicle. For example, propellers are airfoils; the wings of airplanes are airfoils; and the rotor-blades of helicopters are airfoils. Broadly defined, an “airfoil” is a part or a surface, such as a wing, a propeller blade or rudder, whose shape and orientation control the stability, direction, lift, thrust, or propulsion of an aerial vehicle. For the purposes of the present invention, an airfoil is to be generally considered as an aerodynamically shaped, elongated blade that defines a longitudinal axis which extends from the root of the blade to its tip. The blade also defines a chord line that extends from the leading edge of the blade to its trailing edge, and that is generally perpendicular to the blade axis. As is well known, various configurations of airfoils have been designed and constructed for different kinds of aerial vehicles. The more commonly known vehicles that incorporate airfoils include: airplanes, helicopters, auto-gyros, rockets, and tilt-wing aircraft.
As early as the 1930s, there was some experimentation with cycloidal propellers. Specifically, these propellers each incorporate several blades which move on respective cycloidal-type paths as they rotate about a common axis. Cycloidal propellers have the common characteristic that the respective longitudinal axis of each blade remains substantially parallel to a common axis of rotation as the propeller is rotated. In another aspect, however, cycloidal propellers can be rotated in either of two modes. One mode (prolate) is characterized by a blade movement wherein the chord line of the blade remains substantially parallel to the flight path of the vehicle as the blade is rotated around the common axis. Another mode (curtate) is characterized by a blade movement wherein the chord line of the blade remains substantially tangential to the rotational path of the blade around the common axis. It is the curtate mode which is of interest herein.
In a propulsion unit using the curtate mode, the thrust vector of the unit can be manipulated by concertedly varying the orientations of all of the airfoil blades. In light of this fact, it is an object of the present invention to provide a system and method for controlling the orientation of a single airfoil blade or a plurality of airfoil blades as it travels about its blade path. Another object of the present invention is to provide a system and method for creating and controlling the thrust vector of an aerial vehicle having a cycloidal propulsion unit. Yet another object of the present invention is to provide a system for moving an aerial vehicle which is simple to operate, relatively easy to manufacture, and comparatively cost effective.
In accordance with the present invention, a cycloidal propulsion unit incorporates a system for controlling the propulsion unit's thrust vector. Structurally, the cycloidal propulsion unit comprises a base, such as the fuselage of an aerial vehicle, with a hub mounted thereon for rotation about a hub axis. Further, the unit includes a drive shaft or other means for rotating the hub about the hub axis.
For the present invention, at least one airfoil-shaped blade is mounted on the hub for travel thereon along a blade path around the hub axis. As the blade travels along the blade path, it can be manipulated to provide propulsion, as well as lift and control of the vehicle. Structurally, the blade defines a blade axis that is oriented substantially parallel to the hub axis and a chord line that extends from the blade's leading edge to its trailing edge. In the present invention, the blade is pivotally connected to the hub along the blade axis. As a result, the blade may pivot about the blade axis while it travels along the blade path around the hub axis.
Operationally, a control assembly pivots each blade about the respective blade axis to control the blade's angle of attack (i.e. the angle between the chord line of the blade and the relative wind). For the present invention, the control assembly includes a ring mounted on the base for rotation around a ring axis that is substantially parallel to the hub axis. Further, the control unit includes a control rod having an end that is affixed to a point on the ring, and an end that is pivotally attached to a point on the blade. In addition to the ring and control rod, the control unit includes a positioning device that is mounted on the base and engages the ring to selectively position the ring axis relative to the hub axis. As a result of movement of the ring axis relative to the hub axis, the control rod pivots the blade about the blade axis as the airfoil blade travels along the blade path. In this manner, a thrust vector for the propulsion unit is created and controlled.
Structurally, the positioning device includes two substantially perpendicular adjusters that are mounted on the base. Preferably, each adjuster comprises two collinear hydraulic pistons that are positioned around, and oriented for reciprocal radial movement relative to, the hub axis. Further, the positioning device includes a roller mounted at the outer end of each piston to engage the ring. As a result of this cooperation of structure, the ring is able to rotate around the positioning device. For the purposes of the present invention, a hydraulic device is connected to the pistons to selectively extend and retract the pistons to selectively position the ring axis relative to the hub axis. As a result of the movement of the ring axis, each control rod pivots a respective airfoil blade about its blade axis as the airfoil blade travels along the blade path. In this manner, a thrust vector for the propulsion unit is created and controlled.
The novel features of this invention, as well as the invention itself, both as to its structure and its operation, will be best understood from the accompanying drawings, taken in conjunction with the accompanying description, in which similar reference characters refer to similar parts, and in which:
Referring initially to
As indicated in
As mentioned above, the present invention envisions that the blades 32 will be rotated by the hub 30. As shown in
As shown in
For the present invention, the position of the ring axis 68 relative to the hub axis 34 may be manipulated. Specifically, a positioning system 70 is provided to move the ring 60 so that the ring axis 68 is spaced from and parallel to the hub axis 34. Cross-referencing
Referring now to
Cross-referencing
While the particular Hydraulic Cycloidal Control System as herein shown and disclosed in detail is fully capable of obtaining the objects and providing the advantages herein before stated, it is to be understood that it is merely illustrative of the presently preferred embodiments of the invention and that no limitations are intended to the details of construction or design herein shown other than as described in the appended claims.
The U.S. Government has a paid-up license in this invention and the right in limited circumstances to require the patent owner to license others on reasonable terms as provided for by the terms of Contract No. N68335-00-C-0201 awarded by NAVAIR.