MULTI-FUNCTION NACELLES FOR AN AIRCRAFT
20200331589 ยท 2020-10-22
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02T50/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B64C15/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64D27/026
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64D33/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64C21/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T50/60
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B64D27/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64D27/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64C15/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B64C15/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64D27/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An aircraft having a fuselage with a nose and a flat tail at opposite ends and a pair of wings extending therefrom. A pair of nacelles are detachably connected to the top of respective ones of the wings to be spaced from the fuselage to establish an air flow space therebetween, Each wing-mounted nacelle includes a plurality of fans, a corresponding plurality of electric motors to drive the fans, and dividers that separate the fans from one another. Each wing-mounted nacelle also includes a pair of rotatable air inlet slats at an air intake end and a pair of rotatable air exhaust flaps at an air exhaust end that are rotated relative to one another to control horizontal propulsive thrust, thrust vectoring and thrust reversing of the aircraft. A third nacelle is mounted on top of the flat tail of the fuselage between a pair of horizontal turbo generators.
Claims
1. An aircraft including a fuselage, a nose at one end of the fuselage, a tail at an opposite aft end of said fuselage a pair of wings extending outwardly from said fuselage, and at least one nacelle, said one nacelle comprising at least a first fan, at least a first electric motor to power said first fan, and an air flow-through duct surrounding said first fan and first electric motor, said one nacelle connected to one of said pair of wings so that said one nacelle is seated on top of and located above said one wing, said one nacelle being spaced from said fuselage so that an air space is established between said one nacelle and said fuselage through which air flows when said aircraft is in flight.
2. The aircraft recited in claim 1, said one nacelle further comprising at least a second fan and at least a second electric motor to power said second an, said air flow-through duct also surrounding said second electric motor and said second fan, and a first divider extending horizontally along said air flow-through duet to separate said first fan and said first electric motor from said second fan and said second electric motor.
3. The aircraft recited in claim 1, wherein said one nacelle is detachably connected to the one of said pair of wings so that said one nacelle can be removed from the one of said pair of wings without having to remove the one of said wings from said fuselage.
4. The aircraft recited in claim 1, wherein said one nacelle has an air intake end at which air is received when the aircraft is in flight and an air exhaust end lying opposite said air intake end at which the air is exhausted to the atmosphere, said air intake end including a rotatable upper air inlet slat and a rotatable lower air inlet slat spaced one above the other, said rotatable upper and lower air inlet slats being rotatable from a horizontal first position lying in axial alignment with respect to said air flow-through duct to a second position lying at an angle with respect to said air flow-through duct to control the direction of the air flowing through the air intake end of said one nacelle to said at least first fan and said at least first electric motor thereof.
5. The aircraft recited in claim 4, wherein the air exhaust end of said one nacelle includes a rotatable upper air exhaust flap and a rotatable low air exhaust flap spaced one above the other, said rotatable upper air exhaust, flap being rotatable from a horizontal third position lying in axial alignment with the rotatable upper air inlet slat at the horizontal first position thereof to one of a fourth position extending upwardly or a fifth position extending downwardly with respect to the air flow-through duct of said one nacelle to control the direction of the air that is exhausted from the air exhaust end of said one nacelle.
6. The aircraft recited in claim 5, wherein the rotatable lower air exhaust flap at the, air exhaust end of said one nacelle is rotatable from a horizontal sixth position lying in parallel alignment with the rotatable upper air exhaust flap at the horizontal third position thereof to a seventh position extending downwardly with respect to the air flow-through duct of said one nacelle at which to cooperate with said rotatable upper air exhaust flap at the upwardly extending fourth position thereof to control the direction of the air that is exhausted from the air exhaust end of said one nacelle.
7. The aircraft recited in claim 6, said one nacelle further comprising an intermediate air exhaust slat extending horizontally between the air flow-through duct of said one nacelle and the rotatable upper air exhaust flap at the air exhaust end of said one nacelle so that said rotatable upper air exhaust flap at the horizontal third position thereof extends rearwardly of the rotatable lower air exhaust flap at the horizontal sixth position thereof.
8. The aircraft recited in claim 7, wherein the intermediate air exhaust slat of said one nacelle is rotatable from a horizontal eighth position lying in axial alignment with the rotatable upper air exhaust flap at the horizontal third position thereof to a ninth position extending upwardly with respect to said air flow-through duct of said one nacelle at which to cooperate with the upper air exhaust flap at the upwardly extending fourth position thereof to control the direction of the air that is exhausted from the air exhaust end of said one nacelle.
9. The aircraft recited in claim 8, said one nacelle further comprising rotatable upper and lower exhaust diverter flaps located at the exhaust end of said one nacelle between said rotatable upper and lower air exhaust flaps, said upper and lower exhaust diverter flaps being rotatable from a horizontal tenth position lying face-to-face one another and in parallel alignment with each of the upper air exhaust flaps in the horizontal third position thereof and the lower air exhaust flap in the horizontal sixth position thereof to a downwardly extending eleventh position lying in parallel alignment with each of the upper air exhaust flap in the downwardly extending fifth position thereof and the lower air exhaust flap in the downwardly extending seventh position thereof.
10. The aircraft recited in claim 9, wherein the upper and lower exhaust diverter flaps of said one nacelle are also rotatable from said horizontal face-to-face tenth position thereof to an eleventh position extending in different directions relative w one another such that the upper exhaust diverter flap lies in an axial alignment with the upper air exhaust flap in the upwardly extending fourth position thereof and the lower exhaust diverter flap lies in parallel alignment with the lower air exhaust flap in the downwardly extending seventh position thereof.
11. The aircraft recited in claim 4, wherein each of the air intake and air exhaust ends of said one nacelle is rectangular.
12. The aircraft recited in claim 1, also including a second nacelle comprising at least a second fan, at least a second electric motor to power said second fan, and an air flow-through duct surrounding the second fan and the second electric motor of said second nacelle, the air flow-through duct of said second nacelle being positioned on top of the fuselage of said aircraft.
13. The aircraft recited in claim 12, further comprising a pair of turbo generators located in spaced parallel alignment with one another at opposite sides of the tail of the fuselage of said aircraft such that said second nacelle lies between said pair of turbo generators.
14. The aircraft recited in claim 13, wherein said fuselage also includes a pressurized bulkhead and a pressurized cabin located within said fuselage in which passengers are seated when the aircraft is in flight, said pair of turbo generators and said second nacelle being located rearwardly of each of said pressure bulkhead and said pressurized cabin with respect to the tail at the opposite aft end of said fuselage.
15. The aircraft recited in claim 14, further comprising a pair of horizontal tail sections extending outwardly and in opposite directions from the tail of said fuselage, said pair of horizontal tail sections connected to respective ones of said pair of turbo (generators by which said pair of turbo generators are held in said spaced parallel alignment with one another.
16. The aircraft recited in claim 12, wherein said second nacelle also comprises at, least a third fan and at least a third electric motor to power said third fan, the air flow-through duct of said second nacelle also surrounding said third electric motor and said third fan, and a second divider extending horizontally along the air flow-through duct of said second nacelle to separate said second fan and said second electric motor from said third fan and said third electric motor.
17. An aircraft including a fuselage, a nose at one end of the fuselage, a tail at the opposite aft end of said fuselage, a pair of wings extending outwardly from said fuselage, and first, second and third nacelles, each of said nacelles having at least one fan and at least one electric motor to power said one fan, said first and second nacelles being positioned on top of and lying above respective ones of said pair of wings to receive air flow there through when said aircraft is in flight, and said third nacelle being positioned on top of and lying above the tail of said fuselage to also receive air flow therethrough when said aircraft is in flight.
18. The aircraft recited in claim 17, wherein the tail at the opposite aft end of the fuselage is flat, said third nacelle being connected to said fuselage at the top of said flat tail.
19. The aircraft recited in claim 18, wherein the flat tail at the opposite aft end of the fuselage is rotatable up and down to control the vertical pitch of the nose of said fuselage.
20. The aircraft recited in claim 17, wherein said third nacelle that is positioned on top of the tail of said fuselage has a yaw vane that is rotatable relative to the one fan and the one electric motor of said third nacelle to provide the aircraft with yaw control at low speeds.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0019] Referring initially to
[0020] Each of the pair of multi-function nacelles 12 is mounted on respective ones of the pair of wings 5 of the aircraft I so as to be held above the top of the wings and positioned to avoid interference that might be caused by the wings so as to enable the nacelle to receive the maximum inflow of air. As one important feature, the nacelles 12 are mounted on the wings 5 so as to be spaced outwardly and away from the sides of the fuselage 3. Accordingly, an air flow path 16 (best shown in
[0021] Turning now to
[0022] As will now be explained while referring to
[0023] Each of the upper and lower air inlet slats 26 and 28 and the upper and lower air exhaust flaps 30 and 32 of each multi-function, wing mounted nacelle 12 is rotatable so as to cooperate with conventional wing control surfaces and thereby advantageously control the aerodynamic lift, horizontal propulsive thrust, thrust vectoring and thrust reversing of the aircraft 1. Each one of the nacelles 12 as shown in
[0024] More particularly,
[0025]
[0026] Accordingly, a first portion of the air that enters the nacelle 12 through the air inlet slats 26 and 28 and flows into the motors 20 and fans 22 that are enclosed by the flow-through duct 36 is exhausted to the atmosphere in an upward direction by way of a first air exhaust path 58 that runs between the upturned intermediate air exhaust slat 34 and each of the similarly upturned upper air exhaust flap 30 and upper exhaust diverter flap 50. The remaining air that enters the nacelle 12 is exhausted to the atmosphere in a downward direction by way of a second air exhaust path 60 that runs between the downturned lower, air exhaust flap 32 and the similarly downturned lower exhaust diverter flap 52.
[0027]
[0028] Accordingly, the air that enters the air intake end of the nacelle 12 through the downturned upper and lower air inlet slats 26 and 28 and flows into the motors 20 and fans 22 is exhausted from the air exhaust end of the nacelle to the atmosphere in a downward direction towards the ground by way of air exhaust paths 66 that run along, the downturned aft exhaust air diverter 42 and between the similarly downturned upper and lower air exhaust flaps 30 and 32.
[0029] It may be appreciated that by moving (i.e., rotating) the upper and lower air inlet slats 26 and 28 at the air intake end of the nacelle 12, the direction of the air flowing into the nacelle 12 to the motors 20 and fans 22 can be selectively adjusted and thereby tailored to achieve an optimum air flow depending upon whether the aircraft 1 is taking off, landing or simply cruising at altitude. Similarly, the air being exhausted from the air exhaust end of the nacelle 12 can be selectively adjusted by rotating the upper and lower air exhaust flaps 30 and 32, the intermediate air exhaust slat 34, and the upper and lower exhaust diverter flaps 50 and 52 at their respective pivots 46, 48, 56 and 54. in this regard, and by way of example, each of the aforementioned pivots may include a horizontally extending actuator controlled shaft (designated 68 in
[0030]
[0031]
[0032] As in the case of the above-wing mounted nacelles 12, the rear boundary layer tail-mounted nacelle 14 includes a flow-through duct 74 through which air flows. The flow-through duct 74 surrounds a plurality of (e.g., four) electric motors 76 having respective fans 78 located in front of each. The electric motors 76 which drive the fans 78 are powered by the turbo generators 9 that are spaced outwardly from the fuselage 3 by the tail sections 7. Each successive pair of motors 76 and fans 78 is separated by a divider wall 80 to prevent the air that flows into the tail-mounted nacelle 14 from spilling between the fans 78.
[0033] As is best shown in
[0034] By virtue of locating the turbo generators 8 behind the rear pressure bulkhead 72 (of