Impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades

In recent years, the increase trend of flying unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) has been a concerned for aviation authorities with aircraft drone collisions and drone sightings at restricted airspaces. As such, regulations were imposed to govern the use of UAVs. However, under the Federal Aviation Admi...

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Main Author: Beh, Ming Wei
Other Authors: Chow Wai Tuck
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/149277
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1492772021-05-17T08:01:59Z Impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades Beh, Ming Wei Chow Wai Tuck School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering wtchow@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Aeronautical engineering::Accidents and air safety In recent years, the increase trend of flying unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) has been a concerned for aviation authorities with aircraft drone collisions and drone sightings at restricted airspaces. As such, regulations were imposed to govern the use of UAVs. However, under the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) guidelines, lightweight drones not exceeding the takeoff weight of 250 g can be flown for recreational purposes without any form of registration. Similarly, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) announced that a Flying ID is required for all drones exceeding 250 g. Some research papers have thus studied the impact analysis of lightweight drones on large commercial jet engines, and they have concluded that the damage inflicted is insignificant. However, the same cannot be concluded for smaller engines found in business jets that are smaller and thus have thinner fan blades. Business jets are also commonly found in private or regional airports with less security compared to international airports. Hence, this paper will focus on lightweight drone impact collisions on business jet engines using ANSYS Explicit Dynamics for high-velocity impact simulation. Firstly, a CFM 56-3 fan blade model was designed, and it successfully exhibited a realistic blade deformation result in a bird ingestion test. The fan blade from the PW305 business jet engine was subsequently designed, and the UAV collision test with a lightweight drone (DJI Mavic Mini 2) was simulated at different blade span position. Results show that some material failure can occur at the leading edge of the fan blade and these were caused by the denser and heavier drone components. Additionally, UAV strike analysis on multiple blades were analyzed to illustrate the extent of damage to a business jet engine. Results demonstrated that the lightweight drone collisions can cause minor material failure at up to 15% of the leading-edge blade span, and this was primarily caused by the 45° and 90° impact position of the drone with respect to the engine. Multiple blades were damaged and this can affect engine thrust production. Moreover, drone parts that broke off have also entered the jet engine which can cause internal engine disruption and damage acoustic liners surrounding the fan blades. While further research is needed to corroborate current results, the preliminary findings warrant more research to re-evaluate the harmlessness of lightweight drones. Bachelor of Engineering (Aerospace Engineering) 2021-05-17T07:38:07Z 2021-05-17T07:38:07Z 2021 Final Year Project (FYP) Beh, M. W. (2021). Impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/149277 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/149277 en B296 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Aeronautical engineering::Accidents and air safety
spellingShingle Engineering::Aeronautical engineering::Accidents and air safety
Beh, Ming Wei
Impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades
description In recent years, the increase trend of flying unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) has been a concerned for aviation authorities with aircraft drone collisions and drone sightings at restricted airspaces. As such, regulations were imposed to govern the use of UAVs. However, under the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) guidelines, lightweight drones not exceeding the takeoff weight of 250 g can be flown for recreational purposes without any form of registration. Similarly, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) announced that a Flying ID is required for all drones exceeding 250 g. Some research papers have thus studied the impact analysis of lightweight drones on large commercial jet engines, and they have concluded that the damage inflicted is insignificant. However, the same cannot be concluded for smaller engines found in business jets that are smaller and thus have thinner fan blades. Business jets are also commonly found in private or regional airports with less security compared to international airports. Hence, this paper will focus on lightweight drone impact collisions on business jet engines using ANSYS Explicit Dynamics for high-velocity impact simulation. Firstly, a CFM 56-3 fan blade model was designed, and it successfully exhibited a realistic blade deformation result in a bird ingestion test. The fan blade from the PW305 business jet engine was subsequently designed, and the UAV collision test with a lightweight drone (DJI Mavic Mini 2) was simulated at different blade span position. Results show that some material failure can occur at the leading edge of the fan blade and these were caused by the denser and heavier drone components. Additionally, UAV strike analysis on multiple blades were analyzed to illustrate the extent of damage to a business jet engine. Results demonstrated that the lightweight drone collisions can cause minor material failure at up to 15% of the leading-edge blade span, and this was primarily caused by the 45° and 90° impact position of the drone with respect to the engine. Multiple blades were damaged and this can affect engine thrust production. Moreover, drone parts that broke off have also entered the jet engine which can cause internal engine disruption and damage acoustic liners surrounding the fan blades. While further research is needed to corroborate current results, the preliminary findings warrant more research to re-evaluate the harmlessness of lightweight drones.
author2 Chow Wai Tuck
author_facet Chow Wai Tuck
Beh, Ming Wei
format Final Year Project
author Beh, Ming Wei
author_sort Beh, Ming Wei
title Impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades
title_short Impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades
title_full Impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades
title_fullStr Impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades
title_full_unstemmed Impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades
title_sort impact analysis of lightweight drones on business jet engine fan blades
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/149277
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