Annular Wing
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

A closed wing is a
wing A wing is a type of fin that produces both Lift (force), lift and drag while moving through air. Wings are defined by two shape characteristics, an airfoil section and a planform (aeronautics), planform. Wing efficiency is expressed as lift-to-d ...
that effectively has two main planes that merge at their ends so that there are no conventional wing tips. Closed wing designs include the annular wing (commonly known as the cylindrical or ring wing), the joined wing, the box wing, and spiroid tip devices. Like many
wingtip device Wingtip devices are intended to improve the efficiency of fixed-wing aircraft by reducing drag (physics), drag. Although there are several types of wing tip devices which function in different manners, their intended effect is always to reduc ...
s, the closed wing aims to reduce the wasteful effects associated with
wingtip vortices Wingtip vortices are circular patterns of rotating air left behind a wing as it generates Lift (force), lift. The name is a misnomer because the cores of the vortex, vortices are slightly inboard of the wing tips. Wingtip vortices are sometimes ...
that occur at the tips of conventional wings. Although the closed wing has no unique claim on such benefits, many closed wing designs do offer structural advantages over a conventional
cantilever A cantilever is a rigid structural element that extends horizontally and is unsupported at one end. Typically it extends from a flat vertical surface such as a wall, to which it must be firmly attached. Like other structural elements, a cantilev ...
monoplane A monoplane is a fixed-wing aircraft configuration with a single mainplane, in contrast to a biplane or other types of multiplanes, which have multiple wings. A monoplane has inherently the highest efficiency and lowest drag of any wing con ...
.


Characteristics

Wingtip vortices Wingtip vortices are circular patterns of rotating air left behind a wing as it generates Lift (force), lift. The name is a misnomer because the cores of the vortex, vortices are slightly inboard of the wing tips. Wingtip vortices are sometimes ...
form a major component of wake turbulence and are associated with
induced drag Lift-induced drag, induced drag, vortex drag, or sometimes drag due to lift, in aerodynamics, is an aerodynamic drag force that occurs whenever a moving object redirects the airflow coming at it. This drag force occurs in airplanes due to wings or ...
, which is a significant contributor to total drag in most regimes. A closed wing avoids the need for wingtips and thus might be expected to reduce wingtip drag effects. In addition to potential structural advantages over open cantilevered wings, closed wing surfaces have some unique aerodynamic properties: * For a lifting system constrained to fit within a rectangular box of fixed horizontal (spanwise) and vertical dimensions as viewed in the freestream flow direction, the configuration that provides the absolute minimum
induced drag Lift-induced drag, induced drag, vortex drag, or sometimes drag due to lift, in aerodynamics, is an aerodynamic drag force that occurs whenever a moving object redirects the airflow coming at it. This drag force occurs in airplanes due to wings or ...
for a given total vertical lift is a closed system, i.e. a rectangular box wing with lifting surfaces fully occupying all four boundaries of the allowed rectangular area. However, the induced-drag performance of the ideal closed box wing can be approached very closely by open configurations such as the C-wing discussed below. * For any lifting system (or portion of a lifting system) that forms a closed loop as viewed in the freestream flow direction, the optimum lift (or circulation) distribution that yields the minimum induced drag for a given total vertical lift is not unique, but is defined only to within a constant on the closed-loop portion. This is because, regardless of what the circulation distribution is to start with, a constant circulation can be added to the closed-loop portion without changing the total lift of the system or the induced drag. This is the key to explaining how the C-wing produces nearly the same induced-drag reduction as the corresponding fully closed system, as discussed below. The upshot is that although closed systems can produce large induced-drag reductions relative to a conventional planar wing, there is no significant aerodynamic advantage that uniquely accrues to their being closed rather than open.


Configurations

Various types of closed wing have been described: * Box wing * Rhomboidal wing * Flat annular wing * Concentric wing and fuselage


History


Pioneer years

An early example of the closed wing was on the
Blériot III The Blériot III was an early French aeroplane built by pioneer aviators Louis Blériot and Gabriel Voisin. It was later modified and renamed the Blériot IV, but both versions failed to fly. Design and development The Blériot III was radicall ...
aircraft, built in 1906 by
Louis Blériot Louis Charles Joseph Blériot ( , also , ; 1 July 1872 – 1 August 1936) was a French aviator, inventor, and engineer. He developed the first practical headlamp for cars and established a profitable business manufacturing them, using much of t ...
and Gabriel Voisin. The lifting surfaces comprised two annular wings mounted in tandem. The later Blériot IV replaced the forward annular wing with a biplane and added a canard foreplane to make it a three-surface aircraft. It was able to leave the ground in small hops before being damaged beyond repair. Based on the work of G.J.A. Kitchen, Cedric Lee and G. Tilghman Richards built and flew several annular-wing aeroplanes in which the fore and aft segments were on the same level. The first was a biplane. It was followed by a series of monoplanes, the last of the line remaining in use until 1914.


World War II

In 1944, the German designer Ernst Heinkel began working on an annular-wing
VTOL A vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) aircraft is one that can takeoff and landing, take off and land vertically without relying on a runway. This classification can include a variety of types of aircraft including helicopters as well as thrust- ...
multirole single-seater called the '' Lerche'', but the project was soon abandoned.


Postwar

During the 1950s, the French company
SNECMA Safran Aircraft Engines, previously Snecma (''Société nationale d'études et de construction de moteurs d'aviation'') or Snecma Moteurs, is a French aerospace engine manufacturer headquartered in Courcouronnes and a subsidiary of Safran. It d ...
developed the Coléoptère, a single-person
VTOL A vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) aircraft is one that can takeoff and landing, take off and land vertically without relying on a runway. This classification can include a variety of types of aircraft including helicopters as well as thrust- ...
annular wing aircraft. The aircraft proved dangerously unstable despite the development and testing of several prototypes, and the design was abandoned. Later proposals for closed-wing designs included the
Convair Convair, previously Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation, was an American aircraft-manufacturing company that later expanded into rockets and spacecraft. The company was formed in 1943 by the merger of Consolidated Aircraft and Vultee ...
Model 49 Advanced Aerial Fire Support System (AAFSS) and the 1980s Lockheed "Ring Wing" concept. Dr. Julian Wolkovitch continued to develop the idea in the 1980s, claiming it was an efficient structural arrangement in which the horizontal tail provided structural support for the wing as well as acting as a stabilizing surface. The Spiroid
winglet Wingtip devices are intended to improve the efficiency of fixed-wing aircraft by reducing drag. Although there are several types of wing tip devices which function in different manners, their intended effect is always to reduce an aircraft' ...
, a design currently under development by Aviation Partners, is a closed wing surface mounted at the end of a conventional wing. The company announced that the winglets fitted to a Gulfstream II reduced fuel consumption in the cruise phase by over 10%. The Finnish company FlyNano flew a prototype of a closed wing
ultralight aircraft Ultralight aviation (called microlight aviation in some countries) is the flying of lightweight, 1- or 2-seat fixed-wing aircraft. Some countries differentiate between weight-shift control and Aircraft flight control system, conventional three-a ...
, the FlyNano Nano on 11 June 2012. The
Belarus Belarus, officially the Republic of Belarus, is a landlocked country in Eastern Europe. It is bordered by Russia to the east and northeast, Ukraine to the south, Poland to the west, and Lithuania and Latvia to the northwest. Belarus spans an a ...
ian built OW-1
experimental aircraft An experimental aircraft is an aircraft intended for testing new aerospace technologies and design concepts. The term ''research aircraft'' or '' testbed aircraft'', by contrast, generally denotes aircraft modified to perform scientific studies, ...
has since its maiden flight in 2007, been the only crewed annular closed wing aircraft to have successfully maintained stable horizontal flight. Flight tests showed that annular closed wing aircraft are less affected by cross wind than planes with other
wing configuration The wing configuration or planform of a fixed-wing aircraft (including both glider (aircraft), gliders and powered aeroplanes) is its arrangement of lifting and related surfaces. Aircraft designs are often classified by their wing configuratio ...
s. Miscellaneous modern examples include: * Stanford study * Lockheed ring-wing Closed wings remain mostly confined to the realms of studies and conceptual designs, as the engineering challenges of developing a strong, self-supporting closed wing for use in the large airliners that would benefit most from increases in efficiency have yet to be overcome. The closed wing is also used in water, for
surfboard A surfboard is a narrow plank used in surfing. Surfboards are relatively light, but are strong enough to support an individual standing on them while riding an ocean wave. They were invented in ancient Hawaii, where they were known as ''papa hee ...
fins of the type also known as the tunnel fin.


Lockheed Martin Environmentally Responsible Aviation Project

During 2011, the Environmentally Responsible Aviation Project at
NASA The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) is an independent agencies of the United States government, independent agency of the federal government of the United States, US federal government responsible for the United States ...
's Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate invited study proposals towards meeting NASA's goal of reducing future aircraft fuel consumption by 50% compared to 1998. Lockheed Martin proposed a box wing design along with other advanced technologies.


Prandtl Box Wing

In 1924, the German aerodynamicist
Ludwig Prandtl Ludwig Prandtl (4 February 1875 – 15 August 1953) was a German Fluid mechanics, fluid dynamicist, physicist and aerospace scientist. He was a pioneer in the development of rigorous systematic mathematical analyses which he used for underlyin ...
suggested that a box wing, under certain conditions, might provide the minimum induced drag for a given lift and wingspan. In his design, two offset horizontal wings have vertical wings connecting their tips and shaped to provide a linear distribution of side forces. The configuration is said to offer improved efficiency for a range of aircraft. In the 1980s, the Ligeti Stratos used this approach. The name "PrandtlPlane" was coined in the 1990s in research by Aldo Frediani ''et al.'' of the University of Pisa. It is currently also used in some
ultralight aircraft Ultralight aviation (called microlight aviation in some countries) is the flying of lightweight, 1- or 2-seat fixed-wing aircraft. Some countries differentiate between weight-shift control and Aircraft flight control system, conventional three-a ...
. IDINTOS (IDrovolante INnovativo TOScano) is a research project, co-funded by the regional government of Tuscany (Italy) in 2011 in order to design and manufacture an amphibious ultralight PrandtlPlane. The research project has been carried out by a consortium of Tuscan public and private partners, led by the Aerospace Section of the Civil and Industrial Engineering Department of Pisa University, and has resulted in the manufacturing of a 2-seater VLA prototype. The configuration is also claimed to be theoretically efficient for wide-body jet airliners. The largest commercial airliner, the
Airbus A380 The Airbus A380 is a very large wide-body airliner, developed and produced by Airbus until 2021. It is the world's largest passenger airliner and the only full-length double-deck jet airliner. Airbus studies started in 1988, and the pr ...
, must make efficiency trade-offs to keep the wingspan below the 80-meter limit at most airports, but a closed wing with optimal wingspan could be shorter than that of conventional designs, potentially allowing even larger aircraft to use the current infrastructure.


C-wing

The C-wing is a theoretical configuration in which much of the upper centre section of a box wing is removed, creating a wing that folds up and over at the tips but does not rejoin in the centre. A C-wing can achieve very nearly the same induced-drag performance as a corresponding box wing, as shown by the calculations illustrated below. Each of the first three rows in the illustration shows a different C-wing configuration as it is taken through a sequence of theoretical induced-drag calculations in which the wingtips are brought closer together, culminating in the limiting case on the right, where the gap has been taken to zero and the configuration has become a closed box wing (referred to as the "Quasi-closed C-wing" because the calculations were carried out in the limit as the gap went to zero). The parameter ''ε'' is the optimal aerodynamic efficiency ratio and represents the ratio between the aerodynamic efficiency of a given non-planar wing and the corresponding efficiency of a reference classical cantilevered wing with the same wing span and total lift. Both efficiencies are evaluated for their respective optimal lift distributions. Values of ε greater than 1 indicate lower induced drag than that of a classical cantilevered wing for which . Note that all of the C-wing configurations have ''ε'' greater than 1 and that there is little difference (no difference to the two decimal places shown in two of the cases) between a configuration with a substantial gap (the second entry in each row) and the corresponding closed configuration (the third entry in each row). This is because the optimum lift loading calculated for the quasi-closed cases is very small over the upper centre section, and that part of the wing can be removed with little change in lift or drag. The lift distributions shown here for the quasi-closed cases look different from those typically shown for box wings in the classical literature (see Durand figure 81, for example). The classical solution in Durand was obtained by a conformal-mapping analysis that happened to be formulated in a way that led to equal upward loadings on the horizontal panels of the box. But the optimum lift distribution is not unique. A constant inward loading (corresponding to a particular constant circulation) can be added to a classical loading like that shown by Durand to obtain a loading like those in the quasi-closed cases below. The two methods of analysis give different-looking versions of the optimum loading that are not fundamentally different. Except for small differences due to the numerical method used for the quasi-closed cases, the two kinds of loading are in principle just shifted versions of each other.


References


External links

* * * {{Authority control Aircraft wing design Wing configurations