V-N Diagram

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flight envelope – V-n diagram

The control of weight in aircraft design is of extreme importance. Increases in weight require
stronger structures to support them, which in turn lead to further increases in weight and so on.
Excesses of structural weight mean lesser amounts of payload, thereby affecting the economic
viability of the aircraft. The aircraft designer is therefore constantly seeking to pare his aircraft’s
weight to the minimum compatible with safety. However, to ensure general minimum standards of
strength and safety, airworthinessregulations lay down several factors which the primary structure of
the aircraft must satisfy. These are the limit load, which is the maximum load that the aircraft is
expected to experience in normal operation, the proof load, which is the product of the limit load and
the proof factor (1.0–1.25), and the ultimate load, which is the product of the limit load and the
ultimate factor (usually 1.5). The aircraft’s structure must withstand the proof load without detrimental
distortion and should not fail until the ultimate load has been achieved.

The basic strength and flight performance limits for a particular aircraft are selected by the
airworthiness authorities and are contained in the flight envelope or V−n diagram shown in Fig. 13.1.
The curves OA and OF correspond to the stalled condition of the aircraft and are obtained from the
well-known aerodynamic relationship

Therefore, for speeds below VA (positive wing incidence) and VF (negative incidence) the maximum
loads which can be applied to the aircraft are governed by CL,max. As the speed increases it is
possible to apply the positive and negative limit loads, corresponding to n1 and n3, without stalling
the aircraft so that AC and FE represent maximum operational load factors for the aircraft. Above the
design cruising speed VC, the cut-off lines CD1 and D2E relieve the design cases to be covered
since it is not expected that the limit loads will be applied at maximum speed. Values of n1, n2 and n3
are specified by the airworthiness authorities for particular aircraft; typical load factors are shown in
Table 13.1.
Aparticular flight envelope is applicable to one altitude only since CL,max is generally reduced with an
increase of altitude, and the speed of sound decreases with altitude thereby reducing the critical
Mach number and hence the design diving speed VD. Flight envelopes are therefore drawn for a
range of altitudes from sea level to the operational ceiling of the aircraft.

Load factor determination


Several problems require solution before values for the various load factors in the flight envelope
can be determined. The limit load, for example, may be produced by a specified manoeuvre or by an
encounter with a particularly severe gust (gust cases and the associated gust envelope are
discussed in Section 14.4). Clearly some knowledge of possible gust conditions is required to
determine the limiting case. Furthermore, the fixing of the proof and ultimate factors also depends
upon the degree of uncertainty of design, variations in structural strength, structural deterioration,
etc. We shall now investigate some of these problems to see their comparative influence on load
factor values.

Limit load
Anaircraft is subjected to a variety of loads during its operational life, the main classes of which are:
manoeuvre loads, gust loads, undercarriage loads, cabin pressure loads, buffeting and induced
vibrations. Of these, manoeuvre, undercarriage and cabin pressure loads are determined with
reasonable simplicity since manoeuvre loads are controlled design cases, undercarriages are
designed for given maximum descent rates and cabinpressures are specified. The remaining loads
depend to a large extent on the atmospheric conditions encountered during flight. Estimates of the
magnitudes of such loads are only possible therefore if in-flight data on these loads is available. It
obviously requires a great number of hours of flying if the experimental data are to include possible
extremes of atmospheric conditions. In practice, the amount of data required to establish the
probable period of flight time before an aircraft encounters, say, a gust load of a given severity, is a
great deal more than that available. It therefore becomes a problem in statistics to extrapolate the
available data and calculate the probability of an aircraft being subjected to its proof or ultimate load
during its operational life. The aim would be for a zero or negligible rate of occurrence of its ultimate
load and an extremely low rate of occurrence of its proof load. Having decided on an ultimate load,
then the limit load may be fixed as defined in Section 13.1 although the value of the ultimate factor
includes, as we have already noted, allowances for uncertainties in design, variation in structural
strength and structural deterioration.

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