VSP Structural Analysis Module
Transcription
VSP Structural Analysis Module
University of Texas VSP Structural Analysis Module Update - Overview 2nd VSP Workshop, San Luis Obispo, CA Armand J. Chaput, Principal Investigator Hersh Amin, Undergraduate Research Assistant Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics, University of Texas at Austin 7 August 2013 © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Self Introductions Dr. Armand Chaput, Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics (ASE/EM), University of Texas at Austin (UT) • Director, Air System Laboratory (2008 - present) • Senior Lecturer, Air System Engineering Design (UAS focus) • Lockheed Martin – 30 years, advanced product development • Air System Design and Integration - Senior Technical Fellow including assignment as F-35 Joint Strike Fighter Weight “Czar” • Unmanned Combat Air Vehicles - Integrated product team lead • National Aerospace Plane (NASP) - National team Chief Engineer • Advanced Design Department – Manager Undergraduate Research Assistant Team Current Hersh Amin, Research Ass’t Josh Eboh, Team Lead Natalie Maka , Research Ass’t Patil Tabanian, Research Intern Previous Sarah Brown, Research Ass’t Jose Galvan, Research Ass’t Alex Haecker, Research Ass’t Tejas Kulkarni, Team Lead Based on work performed under NASA/NIA Task Order 6322-UTEX, “Advanced Conceptual Design Tools and Development” Armand J. Chaput 2013 VSP Structural Analysis Module (SAM) R&D Objectives (1) Expand VSP user capabilities for employing higher order, physics based tools and methods during conceptual design (CD) (2) Integrate VSP FEA structures module with an open source finite element method (FEM) structural analysis program in a user friendly interactive environment - Currently focused on CalculiX (available under terms of GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation) (3) Develop basic capabilities for open source application of FEM-based mass property (MP) methods to CD - Current effort develops and validates fundamental wing and tail mass estimation methodologies - Follow-on effort (?) will expand applications © 2012 Armand J. Chaput Objective 1 - Expanded Capabilities 2012 VSP Workshop: Version 0 (VSP structures module integrated with CalculiX, posted Sept 2012) - UT Java scripts simplify setup and run unitary VSP FEM model - GUI inputs (loads, constraints, material prop, trim to wing box) - CalculiX solution and display of stress, strain, displacement - Calculate mass of input FEM model - Initial stress/mass results (convergence stability issues) May 2013: Version 1 (fully stressed coarse grid FEM & mass) - Separate upper and lower skin, spar, rib FEMs connected by rigid body nodes resolved convergence issues - Adds: skin section trim (1.0) and solution status feedback (1.1) Today: Version 2 (inertia loads and sizing for multiple load cases) - Angle of attack plus fuel and discrete mass inertias - Convergence for multiple load cases - Initial calibration/validation results Codes and users guide posted © 2013 Armand J. Chaput at: http://vspsam.ae.utexas.edu/ Objective 2 - CalculiX Integration Vehicle Sketch Pad Parametric Internal Geometry Parametric External Geometry External and Internal Mesh Generation UT Convergence Executable (Java) UT Input Executable (Java) Wing Trim Thickness and Material Properties Boundary Conditions and Load Cases CalculiX Input File CalculiX FEM Input Thickness Iteration FEM Solution Solution Files Stress Convergence FEM Post Process and Graphics Mass Calculation Output Files © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Objective 3 – FEM mass for fully stressed trade study wings with minimum gage constraints (from last year) Last iteration – thickness “converged” Last iteration – thickness “converged” 2 spars, 5 ribs yellow = 28.9 ksi 2 spars, 7 ribs yellow = 28.7 ksi Last iteration – thickness “converged” 5 spars, 15 ribs yellow = 28.4 ksi © 2013 Armand J. Chaput • Lightly loaded notional wing • VSP defined spars and ribs • VSP SAM defined thickness, materials and loads (2D running load along 0.25c) • 30 ksi fully-stressed design objective • FEM mass calculated • Time to generate-solve-converge for all 3 solutions from scratch < 3 hr • Issue – solution stability So What’s New? • FEM structural methods have been available for decades - FEM analysis requires a well-defined representation of the airframe structure; design details are not available during CD - CD design and analysis cycles are typically incompatible with time required for FEM model development and turn around - By the time a FEM model is developed the CD team has usually moved on to another concept - CD budgets are often incompatible with specialized FEM analyst staffing requirements • VSP SAM lets structural design and analysis keep up with other CD participants - Traditional FEM model definition, solution and analysis time and skill requirements limit wide scale application VSP SAM enables requirement-based CD mass estimation © 2012 Armand J. Chaput Background – Airframe Mass Property (MP) Estimation Airframe mass is driven by multiple requirements; many of which are not captured by traditional CD analysis methods - Current state-of-the-art MP methods still rely on parametric (statistical or regression analysis of historical data) methods - A problem when trying to predict mass for new vehicles, new materials, new processes or new design requirements Primary loads drive 60% of load carrying airframe mass - Calibrated FEM analyses should be able to predict primary structural mass with better accuracy than parametrics Secondary structure mass is driven by non-primary loads - Many of which could be captured by FEM-based methods System installation and integration effects are problematic - Not defined until much later in the design process Bottom line: FEM-based methods can improve the quality of at least CD and PD primary structure mass estimates - It doesn’t cost any more or take any more time © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Why we need improved CD methods - Example from UT method development effort (A-6E) Typical CD wing parametric estimates: Wdg = 36526 lbm Wto (land) = 60705 lbm 1. Raymer (fighter-attack): = 0.0103 [(Wdgnzdu)0.5 Sref0.622 AR0.785 (1+)0.05 Scsw0.04]] / [(t/c)0.4 Cos(0.25c)] = 4092 lbm WING STRUCTURE - BASIC SECONDARY STRUCTURE TRAILING EDGE DEVICES LEADING EDGE DEVICES SPEED BRAKES WING GROUP - TOTAL Inc. wing fold unique © 2013 Armand J. Chaput 3443 931 593 241 145 5352 297 3443 4374 4966 5207 5352 117” 2. Nicolai (USN fighter): = 19.29 [(Wtonzdu)/(t/c)] {[(Tan le 2(1-) / AR(1+)] 2 +1] 10-6} 0.464 0.70S 0.58 = 7057 lbm [(AR(1+ )] A-6E WING GROUPref (lbm) Sum MP Data from Grumman Aerospace A-6E Weight Report WT-128R-1S37 Aug 1988 Courtesy of Paul Kachurak, NAVAIR FS 228.2 0.15 c 182.6 FS 283.9 0.83 c 0.70 c? 318” © 2013 Armand J. Chaput much unknown For a good design, the driver is structural requirements - Operating environment (speed, altitude and temperature) - Almost always known and available up front - Failure modes, Durability and Damage Tolerance (DaDT) - Loads inc. primary air loads, secondary loads and accidents - All are quantifiable but often missed in CD (inexperience) - Systems integration (loads, penetration, installation access) - Predictable but only when design teams are integrated - In-flight moving parts (control surfaces, doors, gaps & locks) - Ground handling and maintenance access - Manufacturing and assembly (including workforce skill level) - LCC cost, schedule, risk and growth considerations During early phases, many designers use rule of thumb or program defined knock-downs to cover unknowns - Generally expressed in terms of % design stress (or strain) - Similar to our “Conceptual Design Nominal Stress (CDN )” much known Perspective – Why airframes weigh what they weigh FEM Approach to Nominal Stress (CDN) for CD Step 1 - Develop CD-Level FEM Models of Existing Designs - Capture representative geometry, material and primary loads - Focus on primary structure: Spars, Ribs and Skins, Iter 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 B747 Simplified Rib Model before & after Trim Spar Mass (lbm) 13392 10506 8984 8157 7677 7280 7023 Skin Mass (lbm) 26457 21179 18572 17315 17189 17022 17238 Rib Mass (lbm) 6249 3750 2472 1817 1481 1308 1221 Total Mass (lbm) 46100 35435 30030 27290 26348 25610 25482 Solution for DNS = 46.5 Ksi Step 2 - Back out CDN to correlate calculated FEM mass with actual mass consistent with min gage 1. Repeat Process for Multiple Vehicles in Given Class 2. Use Correlated CDN for CD and Early PD Designs © 2013 Armand J. Chaput CDN Mass Estimation Methodology Strategy 1. Solve simple problems first (current effort) • Geometry - trapezoidal wing box, equivalent skin thickness • Loads - symmetrical pull-up, push-over, 2-D distributed loads (inc. Schrenk approx.) with user defined spar load fraction • In-plane isotropic properties – assumed for simplicity • No fasteners or other non-optimums - i.e. “knocked-down” static stress sized structural representation of a real wing 2. Address buckling as separate issue using CalculiX buckling factor 3. Next (?) - apply design “rules of thumb” to estimate basic non-optimums (fasteners and spacing, fuel tanks and sealant, load introduction fittings, hinges, tracks, etc.) Proposed methods are open source and publically available to encourage collaborative development approach © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Good/Bad News - CD Nominal Stress (CDN ) Method Pro • Simple and straight forward, anybody can do it • Based on physics, geometry and CD design requirements • Based on familiar structural tools and methods • Reduces reliance on Fudge Factors for MP estimates • Can be tailored for internal capabilities and skills • Good risk tracking metric for customer engineers Con 1. Little CD history 2. Limited publically available correlation data 3. Methodology for Non-Primary Loads, Fittings and Fasteners and System Integration needs development © 2013 Armand J. Chaput UT Methodology Development/Calibration Status Transport Wings • Advanced Composite Technology (ACT) Test Wing - PDF sketch level geometry, acceptable MP detail - Materials defined, no allowables (nominal GrEP assumed) • B707, B727, B737 (early models) - Based on 1990s NASA supported PDCyl published data - PDF sketch level geometry, no detail below wing box level - Materials assumed (nominal 2024 T3 ) A-6E Wings (metal and composite replacement) • Biz-jet type planform (exc. for folding wing) - Good MP data quality, good for Version 2 validation - PDF sketch level geometry plus handbook data - Materials assumed (nominal 2024 or GrEP) UAV Wings (in progress) • X-56A Wing (1 of 4) - PDF based geometry, good MP, nominal GrEP assumed © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Advanced Composite Technology (ACT) Static Test Article (as reconstructed and analyzed) Wing carrythrough not included in ACT test box ACT thickness not linear Mass analysis based on data from NASA CR-2001-210650-AST Composite Wing Program-Executive Summary Sources: multiple NASA and Boeing ACT Documents Reconstructed midchord thickness Stringer runout LE 30 Stringer runout ACT Test Article © 2013 Armand J. Chaput lbm 1656 1238 350 3244 Fraction 0.41 0.31 0.09 0.81 Aero ribs and intercostals MLG rib blkhd MLG pad up Bolts and nuts SOB Pad up Access panel pad-up Total 520 75 31 80 25 45 4020 0.13 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ACT Transport Fiber – IM7 and AS4 Process - GrEP VARTM Mass Categories Upper and lower skins Spar caps and stringers Spar webs Stress based (subtotal) Load actuators Actuator load (lbf) 40500 99750 -3000 21000 15000 -45000 45000 6000 Spar web CDN = 27.0 ksi Ribs CDN = 37.9 ksi Skin CDN = 36.5 ksi Min gage (given) = 0.22 in 0.03 0.02 0.02 1.00 2y/b 0.947 1.000 0.634 0.704 0.384 0.382 0.202 0.296 Generic Boeing Transport Wings – B727, B737, B747 Parametric geometry from Analytical Fuselage and Wing Weight Estimation of Transport Aircraft, NASA TM 110392, May 1996 Half Half span S ref Sweep Aircraft or Half span DUL 2 article [ft ] [deg] span [ft] AR WDG [lbs] Nz 747-100 737-200 727-300 ACT Test A-6E A-6E A-6E 713,000 100,800 160,000 unk 43,077 43,077 43,077 B747-100 VSP Simplified to 15 ribs 3.75 3.75 3.75 3.75 9.75 9.75 -4.5 2790 502.5 793.5 264.5 264.5 264.5 37.5 25 32 98.5 45.4 55.2 6.96 8.21 7.67 25.5 26.5ksi 5.31 CDN = 46.5 25.5 25.5 26.5 26.5 5.31 5.31 TR (t/c)r 0.265 0.1794 0.220 0.126 0.265 0.154 0.390 0.390 0.390 B747, Min gage = 0.1” exc. ribs = 0.36” (t/c)t Dihed [deg] 0.078 0.112 0.09 7 6 3 0.9 0.59 NASA 110392 0.9 0.59 Wing 0.9 Weights 0.59 B-727 B-737 B-747 B-720 DC-8 MD-11 MD-83 L-1011 0 PDCYL 0 (lbm) 0 8688 5717 52950 13962 22080 33617 6953 25034 CDN = 27.4 ksi B727-100 VSP Full 26 ribs B727, Min gage = 0.1” Engine pylon or Engine or Wing store (per store Fuel side) mass (ea) Y 2 8608 Y 1 Y 0 N LoadNcarrying 0 PrimaryN Total Ystructure 2 structure 2296 structure (lbm) N (lbm) 0 (lbm) N 8791 5414 50395 11747 19130 35157 8720 28355 12388 7671 68761 18914 27924 47614 11553 36101 CDN = 29.8 ksi B737-100 VSP Simplified to 14 ribs B737, Min gage = 0.1” exc ribs = 0.15” Wing Boxes Notional and Extrapolated to Centerline © 2013 Armand J. Chaput 17860 10687 88202 23528 35330 62985 15839 46233 Reconstructed A-6E Geometry BL 66 BL 38.9 BL 0 FS 0 28.5 • • • • • • • • Wing fuel – L/R full 6923 lbm 2 Ext fuel inbd – L/R 4010 lbm (2) 2 Tank w/adapter inbd L/R 398 lbm 2 Pylon inbd L/R : 192.6 lbm (WS 95) 2 Ext fuel outbd – L/R 4010 lbm 2 Tank w/adapter outbd L/R 398 lbm 2 Pylon outbd L/R : 183.4 lbm (WS 141) Pylon (WS 187) – replacement wing only • • • • Max GW landplane: 60705 lbm Max t/o landplane: 60400 lbm Flt des GW (landplane): 36526 DUL = 9.75 Max GW zero fuel, zero stores = 39781 (body fuel =9016 lbm) A-6 graphic and raw data from A-6 Post Design Analysis Report (CORL G003), Dec 1993 117” All locations and linear dimensions in inches Wing Box (less ctr sect) b/2 = 239” Cr = 98.8” Ct = 33” Theo taper ratio = 0.334 Taper (fold) = 0.783 Sref = 218.8 sqft Aspect ratio = 7.25 t/c (BL66) = 0.140 t/c (BL144) = 0.137 t/c (BL 305) = 0.115 Kc = .5/.65 = 0.77 BL 78 Wing Box (theo) b/2 = 305” Cr (theo) = 117” Ct = 33” Theo taper ratio = 0.282 Taper (fold) = 0.661 Sref = 317.7 sqft Aspect ratio = 8.13 t/c (BL0) = 0.143 t/c (BL144) = 0.137 t/c (BL 305) = 0.115 Kc = 1.0 BL 144 BL 318 Theoretical Wing b/2 = 318” Cr (theo) = 182.6” Ct (theo) = 57” Taper ratio = 0.312 Sref = 528.9 sqft Aspect ratio = 5.31 Taper ratio = 0.312 Taper (fold) = 0.689 t/c (BL33) = .09 t/c (BL144) = 0.084 t/c (tip) = 0.059 LE flap = 15% c Flaperon LE at 65% c Est. box Kc = 0.5 BL 305 FS 228.2 0.15 c 0.05 c 56” 0.15 c 28 182.6 FS 283.9 0.65 c 33” 0.70 c 0.83 c 0.70 c? 57” © 2013 Armand J. Chaput 318” A-6E MP Summary Data and VSP SAM Results PRIMARY STRUCTURE Wing box mat'l Wing primary - lbm lbm CENTER SECTION INTERMEDIATE PANEL 1077.80 OUTER PANEL 814.70 LE 142.70 TE 68.60 Wing and intergration WING TOTAL 2964.90 Less center section 2103.80 Skins lbm 718.00 681.40 488.30 86.30 37.40 2011.40 1293.40 Skin Spars and stiffners stiffeners lbm lbm 0.00 39.50 0.00 200.00 1.30 239.50 13.30 15.40 0.00 19.20 14.60 14.60 513.60 474.10 Ribs lbm 0.00 0.00 44.20 27.70 12.00 Rib Bkhd lbm 103.60 196.40 41.40 Js&F lbm 35.40 106.10 58.90 6.40 0.00 83.90 83.90 341.40 237.80 206.80 171.40 Spar web CDN = 19.9 ksi Ribs CDN = 12.4 ksi Skin CDN = 46.2 ksi A-6E @ Wfdg = 36526 lbm no ext tanks, no wing fuel, Min gage = 0.040” SECONDARY STRUCTURE TipFaFen lbm 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 15.20 35.8 51.00 Other lbm 3.40 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 3.40 Pri - sum TipFaFen Doors Acs Panel Fin & walk Misc Sec - sum CV Unique Total lbm lbm lbm lbm lbm lbm lbm lbm lbm 899.90 1799.80 Data from: MODEL A-6E ACTUAL DETAIL WEIGHT AND 1183.90 2367.80 BALANCE REPORT, NO. WT-128R-1S37, August 1988 873.60 1747.20 149.10 298.20 JS&F = Joints, splices and fasteners 83.80 167.60 TipFaFen = tips, fairings and fences 35.80 3190.30 231.80 165.90 2.00 125.60 3.80 529.10 295.70 4015.10 Spar web CDN = 15.0 ksi Ribs CDN = 9.0 ksi Skin CDN = 42.6 ksi A-6E @ Wfdg = 36526 lbm with 2x2300 lbm ext tanks + 3462 lbm wing fuel, Min gage = 0.040” Note - Rib definition includes bulkheads and store stations - Spar web fuel pressure, cat. and arrest loads not included © 2013 Armand J. Chaput VSP SAM CDN Preliminary Results CD Nominal Sress Correlation 50 A-6 spweb 45 A-6 rib Sigma CDN (ksi) 40 A-6 skin ACT spweb 35 ACT rib ACT skin 30 B727-300 25 B737-200 B747-100 20 A-6E weighted 15 ACT weighted 10 Overall wing box mass weighted results 5 0 0 200 400 600 800 WL x Nz (psf) Overall results correlate with expectations - Additional load cases and refined geometry expected to improve results © 2013 Armand J. Chaput VSP SAM CDN Issue – VSP Geometry Constraint A-6E Wing Chord Distribution A-6E Wing Thickness Profile Wing Wing box 1.20 Wing Theo box Theo box less ctr 0.15 1.00 0.13 t/c t/c 0.80 0.60 0.10 Actual t/c distribution 0.40 0.08 0.20 Assumed t/c distribution 0.00 0.05 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 0 50 100 BL (in) 150 200 250 300 350 BL (in) VSP structural module grid limited to single trapezoidal planform and stream-wise chord - Even CD level structures need more flexible multi-panel capability CDNS (psi) - Effect on ACT ACT Wing Box t/c 45.00 0.4 40.00 0.35 Max to min t/c 35.00 0.3 30.00 ht (in) t/c 0.25 0.2 0.15 25.00 20.00 Skin Ribs Spars Least Squares Fit 15.00 0.1 10.00 0.05 Case 1 36.46 37.85 27.02 Case 2 47.31 31.94 34.04 Diff 30% -16% 26% - In order of priority we need (1) non-linear t/c, (2) non-linear chord and (3) nonstream-wise cut capabilities 5.00 0 0 100 200 300 BL (in) © 2013 Armand J. Chaput 400 500 0.00 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 Concluding remarks - VSP Structural Design and Analysis 1. FEM design and analysis can be accommodated during conceptual design without adding onerous requirements for higher levels of design detail - Serious structural design issues can be assessed, identified and resolved without slowing down the pace of design 2. Design and analysis methods can be applied intelligently by designers who are not structural specialists - Tool specific details can be pushed into the background 3. FEM model results correlate with actual mass property data through use of data validated CDN 4. VSP SAM based methods are now ready to replace parametric mass estimate methods for primary load carrying wing structure © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Future Plans 1. Contract nearing completion – tasks to complete in order of priority a. Document results, present at 2014 AIAA ASM b. Complete Version 2 validation c. Post Version 2 Software and Users Guide d. Additional methodology calibration © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Version 2 Overview - New Features Vehicle Sketch Pad Parametric Internal Geometry Parametric External Geometry External and Internal Mesh Generation UT Convergence Executable (Java) UT Input Executable (Java) Wing Trim Thickness and Material Properties Boundary Conditions and Load Cases CalculiX Input File CalculiX FEM Input Thickness Iteration FEM Solution Solution Files Stress Convergence FEM Post Process and Graphics Mass Calculation Output Files © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Wing Trim – Structural Model Geometry • Deletes non-primary load carrying structure - Typically leading and trailing edge devices • Deletes non-load carrying skin panels - To represent typical fabric or film skin sections UT Input Executable (Java) Wing Trim Thickness and Material Properties Boundary Conditions and Load Cases CalculiX Input File © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Inertia Loads (relief) • Discrete loads applied to rib and/or spar centroid at defined rib and/or spar • Fuel inertia applied as internal pressure load along bottom (+nz) or top (-nz) of defined rib/spar tank boundaries nz Fuel mass External store Engine and pylon Front view – Notional Wing UT Input Executable (Java) Wing Trim Thickness and Material Properties Boundary Conditions and Load Cases CalculiX Input File © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Multiple Load Cases 1 – Max + 1 2 - Min + 2 UT Input Executable (Java) Wing Trim Thickness and Material Properties Boundary Conditions and Load Cases CalculiX Input File 4 4 - Max - 3 3 - Min - Adapted from http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/13/PerformanceEnvelope.gif Multiple load case methodology sizes structure (and calculates mass) for most demanding of multiple cases © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Running CalculiX Plus user feedback on solution status © 2013 Armand J. Chaput CalculiX Buckling Factor (BLF) CalculiX Linear Buckling Analysis CalculiX FEM Input 1.20 Buckling Factor (BLF) FEM Solution 1.10 FEM Post Process and Graphics 1.00 Output Files 0.90 0.80 0.70 0.60 4 8 12 16 Number of Ribs CalculiX BLF output can provide design guidance on spacing for stability but at cost of 2x solution time © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Questions © 2013 Armand J. Chaput ord TE sta. ction BL from Max span Chord Rib # fraction LocationLoadfm CL m TE Actuator SOB (in) # fraction (lbf) 1 18 543.5 0 410.7 0.942 0 TE 27000 2 18 543.6 1 435.9 1.000 1 LE 66500 3 13 396.5 0 277.5 0.637 0 TE -2000 4 13 396.5 1 308.3 0.707 1 LE 14000 5 279.5 0 171.5 0.3939 0 TE 10000 6 7.50 236.75 1 169.7 0.389 1 LE -30000 7 194 0 94.0 0.2166 0 TE 30000 8 194 1 132.6 0.3046 1 LE 4000 bte 453.2 453.3 306.2 306.2 189.2 146.45 103.7 103.7 Chord C perp to fraction BL from Max span Chord TESources: (in) from TE SOB (in)NASA fraction Load (lbf) multiple andfraction Boeing ACT 59.42 0 410.7 0.942 0 27000 59.42 1 435.9 1.000 1 66500 72.86 0 277.5 0.637 0 -2000 72.86 1 308.3 0.707 1 14000 83.55 0 171.5 0.393 0 10000 87.46 1 169.7 0.389 1 -30000 91.37 0 94.0 0.216 0 30000 91.37 1 132.6 0.304 1 4000 Documents Reconstructed midchord thickness ACT Transport Stringer runout LE 30 Stringer runout ACT Test Article Fiber – IM7 and AS4 Process - GrEP VARTM © 2013 Armand J. Chaput Load actuators