Peak-Seeking Optimization of Spanwise Lift Distribution for Wings in Formation Flight
Author(s) -
Curtis E. Hanson,
John Ryan
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
aiaa guidance, navigation and control conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2012-4692
Subject(s) - lift (data mining) , aerospace engineering , wing , aeronautics , vortex lift , computer science , marine engineering , mechanics , physics , lift coefficient , engineering , turbulence , reynolds number , data mining
A method is presented for the in-flight optimization of the lift distribution across the wing for minimum drag of an aircraft in formation flight. The usual elliptical distribution that is optimal for a given wing with a given span is no longer optimal for the trailing wing in a formation due to the asymmetric nature of the encountered flow field. Control surfaces along the trailing edge of the wing can be configured to obtain a non-elliptical profile that is more optimal in terms of minimum combined induced and profile drag. Due to the difficult-to-predict nature of formation flight aerodynamics, a Newton-Raphson peak-seeking controller is used to identify in real time the best aileron and flap deployment scheme for minimum total drag. Simulation results show that the peak-seeking controller correctly identifies an optimal trim configuration that provides additional drag savings above those achieved with conventional anti-symmetric aileron trim.
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