The present invention refers to a torsion box skin stiffened with non-parallel stringers of variable cross section and more in particular to a torsion box skin of an horizontal or a vertical tail plane of an aircraft made of a composite material.
The main structure for aircraft lifting surfaces consists of a leading edge, a torsion box, a trailing edge, a root joint and a tip. The torsion box consists of several structural elements: upper and lower skins stiffened by stringers on one side, and spars and ribs on the other side. Typically, the structural elements forming the torsion box are manufactured separately and are joined with the aid of complicated tooling to achieve the necessary tolerances, which are given by the aerodynamic, assembly and structural requirements.
Nowadays, and particularly in the aeronautical industry, composite materials with an organic matrix and continuous fibres, especially CFRP (Carbon Fibre Reinforced Plastic) are widely used in a great variety of structural elements. For example, all the elements which make up a torsion box enumerated beforehand (ribs, stringers, spars and skins) can be manufactured using CFRP.
The skins which make up the torsion boxes are stiffened with span wise longitudinal stringers that improve both the strength and the buckling behaviour of the skins having different cross sections such as “T”, “I”, “J” or omega-shaped cross sections.
There are several types of distributions for the stringers along the skin, but the most widely used for torsion box skins is the one in which the stringers are parallel to the rear spar and between themselves. This configuration permits the orientation of the stringers along the maximum load direction, as well as an increase in their number in the region with the greatest structural responsibility.
This configuration with parallel stringers, together with the fact that both spars are not parallel to each other, means that while the stringers closest to the rear spar extend along all the skin span, the ones closest to the front spar have a smaller length because they are interrupted by the presence of said spar.
The end of a stringer, both due to the intersection with the front spar or due to any other reasons, is a critical structural feature which must be avoided for two main reasons. Firstly because the load supported by the stringer must be transferred to the skin producing forces and momentums which can trigger the fracture of the physical union between skin and stringer and, as a consequence, can endanger the structural integrity of the lifting surface. Secondly, due to the absence of stringers in a region of the skin, said region must have a greater thickness, both to resist the additional load and to stabilize said region, which means it will be penalized in terms of weight.
This invention is focused on the solution of this problem.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a torsion box of an aircraft stabilizing surface having stiffened skins optimized in weight.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a torsion box of an aircraft stabilizing surface having skins stiffened by a reduced number of stringers.
These and another objects are met by a torsion box of an aircraft stabilizing surface comprising a front spar, a rear spar, ribs and upper and lower stiffened skins, in which at least one of said skins is stiffened with a plurality of stringers extending all of them along the full skin span and having a decreasing cross section towards the skin outer edge.
In embodiments of the present invention, all the stringers have a trace along the skin span where the proportions between the skin chord and the chord-wise distances between the trace of each stringer and the front and rear spars remain substantially constant. Therefore the distribution of stringers over the skin is a convergent distribution—in contrast to the “parallel” distribution of the prior art—that, together with the decreasing cross section towards the skin outer edge, allows a reduction in the number of stringers required that contributes to a weight optimization. In such convergent distribution, the distance between stringers decreases as one proceeds from the root joint to the tip
In embodiments of the present invention, the number of said stringers is defined as the number of stringers that, having a predetermined minimum cross section, can be placed in the skin outer edge. The number of stringers is therefore dependant on the selected stringer geometry and its minimum cross section from the stiffening requirements, allowing thus different choices if this can be convenient taking into account design and/or manufacturing constraints.
In preferred embodiments of the present invention, said stringers are omega-shaped stringers due to the stiffening properties of the omega-shaped stringers. However T-shaped stringers, I-shaped stringers or J-shaped stringers are also suitable stringers for this invention.
In preferred embodiments of the present invention, the stabilizing surface is a horizontal tail plane or a vertical tail plane.
In preferred embodiments of the present invention said skin and said stringers are made of a composite material, particularly CFRP.
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 and 5b show, respectively, the omega cross sections of an stringer according to the present invention in the inner and outer torsion box edges.
In the following detailed description of the invention we will mainly refer to a torsion box of an aircraft horizontal tail plane made of CFRP.
An horizontal tail plane is basically made up of two torsion boxes joined together along the aircraft's symmetry plane (two lateral torsion boxes configuration) or along an interface with the fuselage (central torsion box and lateral torsion box configuration).
According to the present invention, as shown in
The benefits associated to this invention are related to:
A decrease in the number of stringers required to optimize the skin in terms of weight.
A minimization of the size of those skin regions without stringer support so that their thickness would not have to be increased.
The fact that none of the stringers is interrupted by the front spar avoiding the problematic structural feature shown in
To a lesser degree, there are other benefits related to the possibility of reducing the number of ribs 21 needed in the region of the structure away from the union of the torsion boxes, due to the increase of the spacing between said ribs 21 due to the improved global behaviour of the structure when the size of the torsion box is reduced and the number of stringers is maintained. This fact also means a reduction of the weight and cost of the horizontal tail plane; as well as maximizing the possible integration of the skin with other elements during the manufacturing process.
Due to the scarce space existing in the edge of the torsion box farthest away from the symmetry plane of the aircraft, the maximum number of stringers which could be placed in this region may be not enough to reinforce the region where the torsion boxes are joined, so this region's thickness would have to be increased, impacting the weight of the structure. Because of this, it is necessary that, along with the convergent distribution of the stringers, the stringers cross section must be variable, being smaller at the outer edge of the torsion box to define the maximum number of stringers possible, and bigger in the region with the highest structural responsibility to resist the loads of this region and support a greater panel surface, compensating the smaller number of stringers and avoiding the need to increase the thickness of said region. Depending on the shape of the cross section of the stringer used, the number of stringers necessary to optimize the weight of the skins varies, being less the bigger the inertia provided by each stringer or the bigger the portion of skin which must be supported and stabilized by said element.
In a preferred embodiment illustrated in
Omega-shaped stringers have a high inertia and can provide support and stability to a great skin panel due to its geometry. These characteristics, along with the advantages it presents for its manufacture, due to the simplification and reduction of the tooling, and therefore of cost, make its use in the reinforcement of skins, both for torsion boxes and fuselages very interesting.
While omega-shaped stringers have been widely used in fuselages in the past few years, they have not been used in torsion boxes due to their inefficiency in terms of weight. This is because the combination of this type of stringers with the prior art parallel distribution involves, as can be seen in
However these drawbacks are not present in a torsion box according to the present invention. On the contrary as a consequence of the use of an omega cross section and the reduction of the number of stringers, both the skin weight and its manufacturing cost, which are directly related to the cross section and the number of stringers, are reduced.
In another embodiments T, I or J shaped stringers can be used being the number of stringers required greater than when using omega-shaped stringers and therefore lessening to a certain extent the benefits in terms of weight and cost although maintaining the benefits related to the elimination of the stringer endings close to the front spar.
The invention is applicable to any torsion box and preferable to horizontal or vertical tail plane torsion boxes.
Although the present invention has been fully described in connection with preferred embodiments, it is evident that modifications may be introduced within the scope thereof, not considering this as limited by these embodiments, but by the contents of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201130123 | Jan 2011 | ES | national |