Methods for improvements of the box wing aircraft concept and corresponding aircraft configuration
20170297708 ยท 2017-10-19
Inventors
Cpc classification
B64C39/068
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
Aircraft configuration by applying the following method steps for improving the conventional box wing aircraft concept: dividing both the backward swept front and the forward swept rear wings into root and tip sections, wherein the tip sections (34) of the front wings are more backward swept than the root sections (37), and the tip sections (35) of the rear wings are more forward swept than the root sections (38). Preferred embodiments comprise moving the front wing to the nose and the rear wing towards the rear end of a long fuselage; adding a middle wing and thereby decreasing the wingspan by one third; dividing the middle wing into a backward swept root section (28) and two tip sections (29,30), one forward and another backward swept. The four wingtips on each side are interconnected by a wingtip fence (26), obtaining seven closed frame structures, as well as seven aerodynamic channels for the stream flow.
Claims
1. Design method for improving the regular, conventional box wing aircraft concept, comprising a fuselage (4), a pair of backward swept front wings (3), a pair of forward swept rear wings (5) and a wingtip fence (6) on each side as a structural connecting part between the wingtips, wherein the improvement comprises the steps of: a) dividing the said backward swept front wings (3) of the regular, conventional box wing aircraft configuration into root sections (13 or 37 of the respective embodiment) and tip sections (14 or 34 of the respective embodiment), wherein the tip sections (14 or 34) are more backward swept than the root sections (13 or 37), wherein the leading edge of the tip section is more backward swept than the leading edge of the root section; b) dividing the said forward swept rear wings (5) of the regular, conventional box wing aircraft configuration into root sections (15 or 38 of the respective embodiment) and tip sections (16 or 35 of the respective embodiment), wherein the tip sections (16 or 35) are more forward swept than the root sections (15 or 38), wherein the trailing edge of the tip section is more forward swept than the trailing edge of the root section.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of adding a pair of middle wings extending from the fuselage, horizontally and vertically located between the front wings and the rear wings, wherein the said middle wing is divided into a backward swept root section (28) and two tip sections, wherein a) one tip section is forward swept (29) and anhedral, another tip section is backward swept (30) and dihedral; b) the roots of both tip sections (29 and 30) are structurally connected to the wingtip of the said root section (28); c) the wingtip of the forward swept tip section (29) is joined to the lower front part of the wingtip fence (26), wherein said wingtip fence is a side wing for structural interconnection of the wingtips; d) the wingtip of the backward swept tip section of the middle wing (30) is joined to the upper aft part of the said wingtip fence (26).
3. A manned or unmanned aircraft comprising: a) a basically tubular or elliptical fuselage (9), having a longitudinal axis; b) a pair of backward swept front wings attached to the front bottom of the fuselage (9), each of these wings comprising (i) a root section (37), which is the inboard section, closest to the fuselage (9), joined to the front bottom of the fuselage (9), having a dihedral angle between 0 and 15 degrees, and having a taper ratio between 1:1 and 1:3, preferably between 1:1 and 1:2; (ii) a tip section (34), joined to the root section (37), having a taper ratio between 1:1 and 1:3, preferably between 1:1 and 1:2, and a larger dihedral angle than the root section (37), more backward swept than the root section (37), wherein the leading edge of the tip section (34) is more backward swept than the leading edge of the root section (37); c) a pair of forward swept rear wings in an elevated position compared to the front wings, structurally connected to the upper aft part of the fuselage (9), each of these wings comprising (i) a root section (38), which is the inboard section, closest to the fuselage (9), basically horizontal, and has a taper ratio between 1:1 and 1:3, preferably between 1:1 and 1:2; (ii) a tip section (35), joined to the root section (38), having a negative dihedral angle (anhedral angle) between 0 and 30 degrees, having a taper ratio between 1:1 and 1:3, preferably between 1:1 and 1:2, more forward swept than the root section (38), wherein the trailing edge of the tip section (35) is more forward swept than the trailing edge of the root section (38); d) a wingtip fence (26) on each side of the aircraft, which is a backward swept side wing, having an airfoil, a leading edge, a trailing edge and two surfaces, connecting the wingtip of the tip section of the backward swept front wing (34) and the wingtip of the tip section of the forward swept rear wing (35).
4. An aircraft of claim 3, wherein the root section of each rear wing (38) is attached to the upper aft part of the fuselage (9) on respective side.
5. An aircraft of claim 3, wherein the root sections of the two rear wings (38) are joined together above the aft part of the fuselage (9), and the structural connection between the fuselage (9) and the elevated rear wings is established by using at least one stabilizer (22), which is a backward swept tail fin extending from the upper aft part of the fuselage (9).
6. An aircraft of claim 3, wherein the root sections of the two rear wings (38) are joined together above the aft part of the fuselage (9), and the structural connection between the fuselage (9) and the elevated rear wings is established by using a V-tail configuration, namely two backward swept tail fins (39) extending from the upper aft part of the fuselage (9), having an angle between them in the range 45 to 137.5 degrees, preferably 60 to 137.5 degrees.
7. The aircraft of claim 3, further comprising a pair of backward swept middle wings (25), horizontally and vertically located between the front and rear wings, wherein each of the roots of these middle wings (25) is attached to the fuselage (9), and the tip of each of these middle wings (25) is joined to the respective wingtip fence (26), between the wingtips of the tip sections of the front and rear wings (34, 35).
8. The aircraft of claim 3, further comprising a pair of middle wings, horizontally and vertically located between the front and rear wings, each of these middle wings comprising: a) a backward swept root section (28), which is the inboard section, extending from the fuselage (9), basically horizontal or having a negative dihedral angle (anhedral angle) between 0 and 15 degrees; b) a forward swept, anhedral tip section (29), with its root joined to the wingtip of the said root section of the middle wing (28) and with its wingtip joined to the lower front portion of the wingtip fence (26); c) a backward swept, dihedral tip section (30), elevated above the said forward swept tip section (29), with its root connected to the wingtip of the said root section of the middle wing (28) and with its wingtip joined to the upper aft portion of the wingtip fence (26); d) a structural connecting part (36), for smooth bridging of the vertical distance between i) the joined forward swept tip section (29) and the backward swept root section (28) of the middle wing, and ii) the root of the backward swept tip section of the middle wing (30) which is located at an elevated vertical level, elevated above the root of the said forward swept tip section (29); wherein said structural bridging part (36) is preferably but not exclusively a portion of an engine housing, at a lower vertical level structurally integrated with the forward swept tip section (29) and the backward swept root section (28), and also integrated, at an elevated level, with the root portion of the backward swept tip section of the middle wing (30).
9. Design method for improving the regular, conventional box wing aircraft concept, comprising a fuselage (4), a pair of backward swept front wings (3), a pair of forward swept rear wings (5) and a wingtip fence (6) on each side as a structural connecting part between the wingtips, wherein the improvement comprises the following step: adding a pair of middle wings extending from the fuselage, horizontally and vertically located between the front wings and the rear wings, wherein the said middle wing is divided into a backward swept root section (28) and two tip sections, wherein a) one tip section is forward swept (29) and anhedral, another tip section is backward swept (30) and dihedral; b) the roots of both tip sections (29 and 30) are structurally connected to the wingtip of the said root section (28); c) the wingtip of the forward swept tip section (29) is joined to the lower front part of the said wingtip fence (26), wherein said wingtip fence is a side wing for structural interconnection of the wingtips; d) the wingtip of the backward swept tip section of the middle wing (30) is joined to the upper aft part of the said wingtip fence (26).
10. Design method for improving the regular, conventional box wing aircraft concept, comprising a fuselage (4), a pair of backward swept front wings (3), a pair of forward swept rear wings (5) and a wingtip fence (6) on each side as a structural connecting part between the wingtips, wherein the improvement comprises the following steps: a) adding a pair of middle wings extending from the fuselage, horizontally and vertically located between the front wings and the rear wings, wherein the said middle wing is divided into a backward swept root section (28) and two tip sections, wherein (i) one tip section is forward swept (29) and anhedral, another tip section is backward swept (30) and dihedral; (ii) the roots of both tip sections (29 and 30) are structurally connected to the wingtip of the said root section (28); (iii) the wingtip of the forward swept tip section (29) is joined to the lower front part of the said wingtip fence (26), which is a side wing for structural interconnection of the wingtips; (iv) the wingtip of the backward swept tip section of the middle wing (30) is joined to the upper aft part of the said wingtip fence (26); b) dividing at least one of the two pairs of wings of the regular, conventional box wing aircraft configuration, namely the front wings (3) and/or the rear wings (5), wherein said dividing comprises at least one of the steps of (i) dividing the backward swept front wings (3) of the regular, conventional box wing aircraft configuration into root sections (13 or 37 of the respective embodiment) and tip sections (14 or 34 of the respective embodiment), wherein the tip sections (14 or 34) are more backward swept than the root sections (13 or 37); (ii) dividing the forward swept rear wings (5) of the regular, conventional box wing aircraft configuration into root sections (15 or 38 of the respective embodiment) and tip sections (16 or 35 of the respective embodiment), wherein the tip sections (16 or 35) are more forward swept than the root sections (15 or 38).
11. The aircraft of any one of claim 3 to claim 8, further comprising: a) a plurality of engines mounted to the aircraft parts with or without additional structural interconnecting parts, or integrated with the structure of the aircraft parts such as units of a distributed propulsion system, with no limit to only one type of engine and no limit to only one kind of propulsion system but also a combination of different types of engines and different propulsion methods; b) a plurality of aerodynamic devices attached to at least one of the wing sections; preferably to all of them, also including the wingtip fences (26) and the fins (22, 39).
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0036] Referring now to the drawings, most of the embodiments show a large airliner or cargo plane. The present invention is in no way limited to this type of aircraft; it is applicable to any aircraft of any size, any purpose and application; manned or unmanned; and with any type of propulsion or combination of different propulsion systems for different flying conditions, without any limit as regards speed, altitude or function. The scope of the invention is not limited by materials. Any materials can be used allowing the construction and operation of the invention. Airfoils and other details of the embodiment and structure are established in a way that will be understood by those skilled in the art. Throughout the drawings, the symmetric aircraft parts, one positioned on one side of the fuselage and another on the opposite side, are provided with only one particular reference numeral when it is clear that the numbered item has an identical mirrored counterpart.
[0037]
[0038]
[0039] The monoplane wing area is substantially the same as the total wing area of the box wing biplane, if the same weight to be lifted. When inventors and manufacturers design their modern box wing aircraft, they use thin wings, for aerodynamic reasons, and their wingspan is not significantly different from the wingspan of the monoplane they want to compete with.
[0040]
[0041] A significant conceptual difference between the monoplane and the box wing concept is that the large wing volume of a monoplane is generally used to contain large fuel tanks while the thin box wings cannot hold a lot of fuel, and therefore, the wide belly extension 8 of the fuselage 4 is suitable as a fuel tank.
[0042]
[0043] The long fuselage 9 in
[0044] The solution provided by the present invention is shown in
[0045] The root section of the backward swept front wing 13 has a sweep angle 17 similar to that of a modern airliner. This sweep angle 17 is smaller than the sweep angle 18 of the backward swept tip section of the front wing 14. The root section of the forward swept rear wing 15 has a substantially same sweep angle 19 as the sweep angle 17 of the root section of the front wing 13, but this angle 19 is a forward sweep angle. This sweep angle 19 is smaller than the sweep angle 20 of the forward swept tip section of the rear wing 16. Thereby the wingtip fence 21 is shorter, and stronger, compared to the wingtip fence 12 of the prior art, when the straight box wings 10 and 11 are longitudinally stretched, as shown in
[0046] The root of the root section of the forward swept rear wing 15, in
[0047] The wingtip of the backward swept tip section of the front wing 14 and the wingtip of the forward swept tip section of the rear wing 16 are structurally connected with a wingtip fence 21, which is a non-tapered, backward swept non-lifting vertical wing with symmetric and horizontal airfoil. The lower front end of this wingtip fence 21 is joined to the wingtip of the tip section of the front wing 14 and its higher rear end is joined to the wingtip of the tip section of the rear wing 16. All the structural connections between the parts of the present invention are established in a way which is understood by those skilled in the art.
[0048] Having a front wing 10 as front as possible and the rear wing 11 as rear as possible as in
[0049] Thereby, each of the method steps of (i) extending the length of the fuselage; (ii) moving the front and rear wings longitudinally as far as possible from each other; as well as (iii) introducing angled front and angled rear wings, contributes to obtain a large fuel tank, which can contain enough fuel for long range flights. At the same time, the angled front and rear wings shorten the wingtip fence 21, as shown in
[0050] The solution is to introduce a middle wing 25, as shown in
[0051] This simple, straight middle wing 25 in
[0052] The root of the middle wing 25 in
[0053] An even more preferable embodiment of a middle wing is shown in
[0054] The backward sweep angle 31 of the root section of the middle wing 28 is substantially the same as the forward sweep angle 32 of the forward swept tip section of the middle wing 29, as well as the backward sweep angle 33 of the backward swept tip section of the middle wing 30. These sweep angles, 31, 32 and 33, are substantially the same as the sweep angle of the wing of a modern monoplane airliner.
[0055] The wingtip of the forward swept tip section of the middle wing 29 in
[0056] The root of the root section of the middle wing 28 in
[0057] The root chords of the tip sections 29 and 30 in the preferred embodiment shown in
[0058] The reason for this solution, in this particular embodiment shown in
[0059] The embodiment in
[0060]
[0061]
[0062] One closed frame in
[0063]
[0064] The main part of the airflow around the aircraft of the present invention is forced to go through these frames, formed by the wing sections and other structural parts of the aircraft. The stream flow is divided into seven aerodynamic channels at the most, as shown in
[0065] As was mentioned, the box wing aircraft configuration implicitly disclosed in RCD EM 002544510-0001 is not functional. All four engines are Ramjet-type and they cannot lift the aircraft from the runway because they need an established airflow of several hundred km/h for start.
[0066] The propulsion for the box wing aircraft of the present invention shown in
[0067]
[0068] The box wing aircraft concept cannot be accepted for passenger traffic before a solution for convenient embarking and disembarking is presented. Airport boarding bridges cannot come close enough to the passenger door especially when the front wing is attached to the nose, as in the present invention. However, it is not a law of nature that we must use boarding bridges for embarking and disembarking. Very large passenger aircraft are desired and the boarding bridges are a bottleneck, box wing aircraft or not.
[0069]
[0070] The passenger doors of the box wing aircraft must be located in positions easily accessible for docking with such Airport Shuttle Vehicles; preferably several vehicles simultaneously docked to each passenger deck on both sides of the aircraft. Embarking and disembarking can be quick even for a large box wing airliner with more than thousand passengers, using a fleet of shuttle vehicles. Such an Airport Shuttle Vehicle has simple tasks in a controlled environment which means great opportunity for unmanned, adaptive preprogrammed operation under limited human supervision.
[0071] There are similar existing mobile passenger lounges, although without side support legs; furthermore catering and cargo load vehicles, with side support legs but without passenger cabins. The patentability of this particular Airport Shuttle Vehicle is therefore limited, but this enhanced large-scale embarking-disembarking system is worth mentioning as an effort to eliminate one of the shortcomings of the box wing concept for large airliners.