Unmanned aerial vehicle
09669924 ยท 2017-06-06
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B64U60/70
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64C29/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T29/49826
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
B64U10/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B64C29/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) capable of vertical and horizontal flight modes, a method for assembling a UAV, and a kit of parts for assembling a UAV. The UAV comprises a wing structure comprising elongated equal first and second wings; a support structure comprising first and second sections coupled to a middle position of the wing structure and extending in opposite directions perpendicular to the wing structure; and four propellers, each mounted to a respective one of the first and second wings, and first and second sections, for powering the UAV during both vertical and horizontal flight modes.
Claims
1. A method of transitioning between a vertical flight mode and a horizontal flight mode, the method comprising the steps of: providing a UAV having: a wing structure comprising elongated equal first and second wings, a support structure comprising first and second sections coupled to a middle position of the wing structure and extending in opposite directions perpendicular to the wing structure, four propellers, each mounted to a respective one of the first and second wings, and first and second sections; a single powerplant continuously connected to each of the propellers during both the vertical and horizontal flight modes, the powerplant having a power rating based on at least a weight of the UAV; and electronic components configured to control the UAV based on an aerodynamic model covering a linear aerodynamic range of angles-of-attack; operating the powerplant to drive the propellers to perform a vertical climb to a speed equal to at least a stall speed of the UAV; and at a predetermined height of the UAV and said speed, executing a circular maneuver about a vertical plane to transition from the vertical flight mode to the horizontal flight mode, the circular maneuver having a radius based on said speed, wherein angles-of-attack of the wing structure are within a linear aerodynamic range throughout the transition.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein rotational speeds of the respective propellers are independently controlled.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the same flight controls are used for both vertical and horizontal flight modes.
4. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein flight controls for roll, pitch and yaw in vertical and horizontal flight modes are decoupled.
5. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the steps of operating the powerplant and executing a circular maneuver are performed autonomously by the electronic components.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Embodiments of the invention will be better understood and readily apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art from the following written description, by way of example only, and in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(10) The fuselage 220 is located at the middle of the wing structure 210, and divides the wing structure 210 into a left wing and a right wing. For example, the wing structure 210 comprises a single continuous structure and the fuselage is assembled to its mid-point. Alternatively, the wing structure 210 can comprise separate left and right wings assembled to the fuselage 220. Typically, the fuselage 220 comprises a rigid housing that contains e.g. electronic components 221 for controlling the UAV 200, power source 222 (
(11) As can be seen from
(12) In example embodiments, the UAV 200 is powered by four propellers 202a-d (which function as rotors during vertical flight), which are disposed similar to the quadrotor configuration. For example, two propellers 202a, 202c are mounted to the left and right wings of the wing structure 210, while two propellers 202b, 202d are mounted to the upper and lower sections of the support structure 230, respectively. Preferably, propellers 202a and 202c have the same sizes and are mounted at equal distances to the fuselage 220. Similarly, propellers 202b and 202d have the same sizes and are mounted at equal distances to the fuselage 220. In example embodiments, the distances are such that the propellers 202a-d do not interfere with each other or with any other structure of the UAV 200, e.g. the fuselage 220.
(13) Further, in the example embodiment, propellers 202a, 202c are disposed at the leading edge of the wing structure 210, while propellers 202b, 202d are disposed at the leading edge of the support structure 230. Alternative embodiments may include the placement of propellers 202a-d at any of the respective trailing edges in a pusher arrangement. In such embodiments, the drag on the aircraft may be lower as the slipstream makes no contact with the aircraft structure, but it may then be more difficult to design the aircraft to sit on a ground with portions of the trailing edges of wing structure 210 and support structure 230 contacting the ground.
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(15) From the resting position as shown in
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(17) For landing, it will be appreciated that the UAV 200 starts from the airplane mode. The UAV 200 may descend to a predetermined height, where it transitions toward the helicopter mode, e.g. by performing a pull-up manoeuvre that covers the quarter of the circular manoeuvre between stage 5 and stage 2 (
(18) In a preferred embodiment, the UAV 200 is capable of executing the circular manoeuvre (for flight transition) that involves only linear aerodynamics. That is, throughout the transition manoeuvre, the angles-of-attack of the UAV 200 are within the linear, pre-stall range. This may be achieved, for example, by adequately powering and controlling the speed of the UAV 200, hence the radius of the circular motion. For example, the speed is at least the stall speed, with higher speeds utilising more power and requiring a more powerful engine.
(19) Typically, the circular manoeuvre needs a significant power margin to accomplish as certain portions involve a vertical climb at speeds equal to at least the stall speed. As the UAV of the example embodiments has no tail boom, landing gear, control surfaces, or tilting mechanisms and associated actuators, the UAV is inherently lightweight, a feature that can facilitate meeting the severe power margin requirements of the circular manoeuvre while operating in the linear regime of aerodynamics.
(20) Thus, during the development of an aerodynamic model for autonomous transition, there is no need to deal with the characteristics of complex, non-linear aerodynamics at high angles-of-attack, nor the complex changes in stability characteristics. Furthermore, as the transition uses only a narrow range of angles-of-attack and flight speeds, the size of the aerodynamic database needed for adequate coverage of the transition envelope may be significantly reduced, along with the cost and effort needed to generate it. In the example embodiments, these can result in distinct reductions in the complexity of aerodynamic modelling for autonomous transition development.
(21) Referring to
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(23) For example, referring to
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(25) The UAV according to the example embodiments advantageously does not require launch or recovery equipment, runway, or tilting mechanisms. Preferably, a single set of flight controls can be used, and the same controls concept can be applied in both vertical and horizontal flight modes. In addition, flight controls for roll, pitch and yaw are decoupled in vertical and horizontal flight modes. Thus, the UAV in the example embodiments may be less complex than tilt-rotor and tilt-wing equivalents. Moreover, the low centre of gravity may advantageously allow stable ground handling, landing in a wind, or on rolling ship decks. This may also reduce the susceptibility to toppling found in tail-sitters. Further, the UAV according to the example embodiment is advantageously configured to accomplish flight transition using only the linear range of angles-of-attack. This may result in a distinct reduction in the cost, effort and complexity in the development of autonomous transition. The size (and cost to generate it) of the aerodynamic database for adequate coverage of the transition envelope may be reduced. This may also render unnecessary the characterization and analysis of the highly non-linear and complex aerodynamics which occur at the high angle-of-attack region, or the development of complex algorithms to achieve autonomous control over this region. Advantageously, the UAV of the example embodiments can make use of fuel cells (which have high energy densities or electrical charges per unit weight) for power during airplane mode cruise, for achieving high endurance. Meeting the severe power margin requirements of the transition manoeuvre may be facilitated by the UAV being inherently light in weight, as it has no tail boom, landing gear, control surfaces, or tilting mechanisms and associated actuators.
(26) It will be appreciated by a person skilled in the art that numerous variations and/or modifications may be made to the present invention as shown in the specific embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as broadly described. The present embodiments are, therefore, to be considered in all respects to be illustrative and not restrictive.