METHOD OF DE-ICING THE LEADING EDGE OF AN AERODYNAMIC SURFACE AND AIRCRAFT IMPLEMENTING SUCH A METHOD

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20090090814
  • Publication Number
    20090090814
  • Date Filed
    January 15, 2007
    17 years ago
  • Date Published
    April 09, 2009
    15 years ago
Abstract
According to the invention, on at least one of the faces (1E, 1I) of said leading edge (1), forward of the partition (3), an action is exerted on the fluid flow (EF) so as to cause the latter to switch from the laminar state (EFL) to the turbulent state (EFT) in order to increase the thermal exchanges and minimize the thermal stresses on siad leading edge.
Description

The present invention relates to the deicing of the leading edge of aircraft aerodynamic surfaces, such as wings, empennages or engine nacelles.


It is known that, if required (prevention against the formation of ice or elimination of ice already formed), the leading edge of such aerodynamic surfaces is deiced by warming with pressurized hot air, tapped off from at least one of the engines of the aircraft and conveyed into the interior of said leading edge by a pressurized hot air circulation circuit.


For this purpose, an aerodynamic surface such as this comprises, in a known manner, a hollow leading edge closed, at the rear, by an internal partition (or frame) connecting the bottom face and top face of said leading edge, at least one orifice being designed to place said leading edge in communication with the exterior, and at least one hot air feed pipe is envisaged, able to be joined, on one side, to said pressurized hot air circulation circuit and, on the other side, to at least one injector injecting a stream of said pressurized hot air into said leading edge.


Thus, said hot air stream circulates in said leading edge while warming it before escaping to the exterior through said communication orifice.


In practice, in a known deicing system such as this, one is confronted with the difficulty that the flow rate and temperature of the hot air tapped off from said engine vary significantly as a function of the engine output: for example, when the aircraft is on standby on the ground and the engine output is low, the flow rate and temperature of said hot air tapped off are also at a low level, while, when the aircraft is climbing, the output of the engine is high and the flow rate and temperature of said hot air tapped off also exhibit high values.


Now, a known deicing system such as this must be effective in both the extreme cases mentioned above. It follows from this that, said deicing system being by construction designed to be effective at low output, said leading edge might be damaged, if not destroyed, for high outputs of said engine.


To solve this problem, it would of course be possible to use refractory materials to at least partially make the leading edge, or indeed envisage structural reinforcements of the latter. However, those would be expensive solutions, in addition increasing the mass of said leading edge.


The object of the present invention is to remedy the drawbacks mentioned above in a simple and effective manner.


To this end, according to the invention, the method for protecting the hollow leading edge of an aircraft aerodynamic surface against the damaging effects of excessively high temperatures of the hot deicing air circulating inside said leading edge, said leading edge being closed, at the rear, by a partition connecting the top face and bottom face of said leading edge and said hot deicing air being tapped off from at least one engine of said aircraft, is noteworthy in that, on at least one of said faces of the leading edge, forward of said partition, an action is exerted on the fluid flow so as to cause the latter to switch from the laminar state to the turbulent state.


The present invention results from the following two findings noted by the applicant:

    • when hot spots appear in such a leading edge, they are situated in the vicinity of the junction between said internal partition and the faces of said leading edge; and
    • in the vicinity of such a junction, the fluid flow on said faces of the leading edge is laminar.


Thus, by acting on said fluid flow forward of said partition (that is to say upstream when considering this fluid flow) so as to cause the latter to switch from the laminar state to the turbulent state, the coefficient of heat exchange between said leading edge and said fluid flow, forward of and at the level of said hot spots, is greatly increased, thereby making it possible to cool and protect said leading edge at locations sensitive to excessively high temperatures.


It will be noted that, in the aircraft takeoff phase, the fluid flow on said leading edge being all the more significant the higher the speed of the aircraft, the effectiveness of the cooling of said leading edge increases with this speed, and therefore with the output of said engine. On the other hand, when there is no fluid flow on the leading edge (aircraft stationary on the ground) or when this fluid flow is weak, the implementation of the invention is neutral and the deicing remains optimal for these conditions.


When said aerodynamic surface is a wing or an empennage, it is generally advantageous to implement the invention both on the top face and on the bottom face of said leading edge.


On the other hand, when said aerodynamic surface is an engine nacelle, it is generally sufficient to implement the invention only on the top face of the leading edge, the bottom face exhibiting weaker thermal stresses.


In a particularly simple and advantageous implementation of the invention, the face (or faces) of the leading edge is (or are) rendered rough at least in part. This action could be effected by shot-blasting (or by any other analogous procedure) of said face (or faces).


However, it is preferable to effect this action by adding a rough band, for example of the abrasive type, to said face (or faces) of the leading edge, at least substantially parallel to said partition. A rough band such as this can be installed easily by riveting, welding, adhesive bonding, etc. Moreover, the use of such a band exhibits the advantage that its position on the leading edge can be finely adjusted. Furthermore, such a band has no impact on the process for fabricating the leading edge and demands neither material of any particular nature, nor structural reinforcement, to make the latter.


The present invention relates, moreover, to an aircraft comprising:

    • at least one engine;
    • at least one aerodynamic surface provided with a leading edge sensitive to icing, said leading edge being hollow and closed at the rear by a partition connecting the top face and bottom face of said leading edge; and
    • at least one pressurized hot air feed pipe joined, on one side, to said engine and, on the other side, to at least one injector injecting a stream of said pressurized hot air into said leading edge, so that said hot air stream circulates in said leading edge while warming it,


      said aircraft being noteworthy in that at least one of said faces of said leading edge is rough forward of said partition, so as to render the fluid flow on said face turbulent.


Preferably, the roughness of said face originates from the fact that the latter carries a rough band added at least substantially parallel to said partition.





The figures of the appended drawing will elucidate the manner in which the invention may be effected. In these figures, identical references designate similar elements.



FIG. 1 is a schematic view, in cross section along the line I-I of FIG. 2, of a leading edge enhanced according to the invention.



FIG. 2 is a view from above of the leading edge of FIG. 1.





In the schematic example of FIGS. 1 and 2 is represented the leading edge 1 of an aerodynamic surface 2 of an aircraft (not represented). The aerodynamic surface 2 is, for example, the nacelle of an engine M (not represented) of said aircraft.


The leading edge 1 is hollow and it is closed at the rear by a partition 3 connecting the top face 1E and the bottom face 1I of said leading edge.


Inside the aerodynamic surface 2 is envisaged a pressurized hot air feed pipe 4 joined on one side to said engine M, from which said hot air is tapped off (see the arrow F). On the other side, said pipe 4 is joined, across the partition 3, to an injector 5 injecting a pressurized hot air stream into said leading edge 1 (see the arrow f). Said hot air stream circulates inside said leading edge 1, while warming it so as to eliminate any ice formation on its top face 1E and/or bottom face 1I, and is then vented to the atmosphere through one or more orifices (not represented).


If the output of the engine M is high, the flow rate and the temperature of the hot air streams F and f are significant and hot spots 6 and/or 7 might appear in said leading edge 1, at the junction between the partition 3, on the one hand, and the top face 1E and/or the bottom face 1I of the leading edge 1, on the other hand.


In the example represented in FIGS. 1 and 2, it has been assumed that the hot spot 7, at the level of the bottom face 1I, could not have any damaging action on the leading edge 1, but that, conversely, the hot spot 6, at the level of the top face 1E, could damage, and even destroy, said leading edge 1.


Also, according to the invention, on said top face 1E, forward of the partition 3, is installed a band 8 of a rough material, parallel to said partition. The fixing of the rough band 8 on the top face 1E can be effected by any known means, such as adhesive bonding, riveting, welding, etc. The rough band 8 can be of the type of the known industrial abrasives, for example based on silicon carbide.


On account of the presence of the band 8 on the top face 1E, the fluid flow EF on the latter switches from the laminar state EFL (forward of the band 8) to the turbulent state EFT (from the band 8 onwards). Therefore, at the level of the hot spot 6, favorable conditions of thermal convection between the top face 1E and the exterior environment are created, making it possible to protect said top face 1E against excessively high temperatures.


It will readily be understood that the width l of the band 8, the distance D of the latter from the partition 3, as well as the granulometry of said rough band, are parameters that make it possible to finely adjust the action of said band on the flow EF.


It will be understood, moreover, that if the hot spot 7 were dangerous for the integrity of the leading edge 1, it would be possible to install on the bottom face 1I a rough band similar to the band 8 added to the top face 1E.

Claims
  • 1-8. (canceled)
  • 9. A method for protecting the hollow leading edge (1) of an aircraft aerodynamic surface (2) against the damaging effects of excessively high temperatures of the hot deicing air (f) circulating inside said leading edge (1), said leading edge (1) being closed, at the rear, by a partition (3) connecting the top face (1E) and bottom face (1I) of said leading edge and said hot deicing air (f) being tapped off from at least one engine (M) of said aircraft, wherein, on at least one of said faces (1E, 1I) of the leading edge (1), forward of said partition (3), an action is exerted on the fluid flow (EF) so as to cause the latter to switch from the laminar state (EFL) to the turbulent state (EFT).
  • 10. The method as claimed in claim 9, applied to an aerodynamic surface (2) of wing or empennage type, wherein said action is exerted both on the top face (1E) and on the bottom face (1I) of said leading edge (1).
  • 11. The method as claimed in claim 9, applied to an aerodynamic surface (2) of engine nacelle type, wherein said action is exerted on the top face (1E) of said leading edge.
  • 12. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein said action consists in rendering at least one part of said face of the leading edge (1) rough.
  • 13. The method as claimed in claim 12, wherein said action consists in adding a rough band (8) to said face (1E, 1I) of the leading edge (1), at least substantially parallel to said partition (3).
  • 14. The method as claimed in claim 13, wherein said rough band (8) consists of an abrasive.
  • 15. An aircraft comprising: at least one engine (M);at least one aerodynamic surface (2) provided with a leading edge (1) sensitive to icing, said leading edge (1) being hollow and closed at the rear by a partition (3) connecting the top face (1E) and bottom face (1I) of said leading edge; andat least one pressurized hot air feed pipe (4) side, to said engine (M) and, on the other side, to at least one injector stream (f) of said pressurized hot air into said leading edge (1), so that said hot air stream (f) circulates in said leading edge (1) while warming it, wherein at least one of said faces (1E, 1I) of said leading edge is rough forward of said partition (3), so as to render the fluid flow on said face turbulent.
  • 16. The aircraft as claimed in claim 15, wherein said rough face carries a rough band (8) added at least substantially parallel to said partition (3).
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
06 00350 Jan 2006 FR national
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 371c Date
PCT/FR2007/000065 1/15/2007 WO 00 7/7/2008