Wind Tunnel Testing Of A Joined-wing Aircraft Model With Additive Manufactured Components

In this paper, the suitability of using additive manufacturing to fabricate aircraft test model components for use in wind tunnel testing will be reported. The purpose is to investigate the aerodynamic performance of a joined-wing aircraft model under subsonic flow conditions. The resulting test mo...

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Main Authors: Teo, Zhen Wei, New, Tze How, Ong, Z. A., Nagel, B., Gollnick, V., Pfeiffer, T., Li, S.
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84550
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41827
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-845502020-09-24T20:11:44Z Wind Tunnel Testing Of A Joined-wing Aircraft Model With Additive Manufactured Components Teo, Zhen Wei New, Tze How Ong, Z. A. Nagel, B. Gollnick, V. Pfeiffer, T. Li, S. School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing (Pro-AM 2016) Singapore Centre for 3D Printing Additive Manufacturing Wind Tunnel Testing In this paper, the suitability of using additive manufacturing to fabricate aircraft test model components for use in wind tunnel testing will be reported. The purpose is to investigate the aerodynamic performance of a joined-wing aircraft model under subsonic flow conditions. The resulting test model wings are both complex and thin, and hence significant challenges surround the use of conventional machining due to vibrations from the cutting tools and non-trivial wing thinness. In contrast, additive manufacturing technique was able to overcome these fabrication issues, with a faster turnaround time, less material wastage and ease of design. However, surface finishing and cost issues associated with the additive manufactured components were observed during the study. In particular, significant deflections of the additive manufactured component were observed during testing, which could have explained discrepancies found between the experimental and numerical simulation results. Nonetheless, possible ways to correct these discrepancies will be described and discussed here. Published version 2016-12-12T09:11:29Z 2019-12-06T15:47:03Z 2016-12-12T09:11:29Z 2019-12-06T15:47:03Z 2016 Conference Paper Teo, Z. W., New, T. H., Pfeiffer, T., Li, S., Ong, Z. A., Nagel, B., et al. (2016). Wind Tunnel Testing Of A Joined-wing Aircraft Model With Additive Manufactured Components. Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing (Pro-AM 2016), 170-175. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84550 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41827 en © 2016 by Pro-AM 2016 Organizers. Published by Research Publishing, Singapore 6 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Additive Manufacturing
Wind Tunnel Testing
spellingShingle Additive Manufacturing
Wind Tunnel Testing
Teo, Zhen Wei
New, Tze How
Ong, Z. A.
Nagel, B.
Gollnick, V.
Pfeiffer, T.
Li, S.
Wind Tunnel Testing Of A Joined-wing Aircraft Model With Additive Manufactured Components
description In this paper, the suitability of using additive manufacturing to fabricate aircraft test model components for use in wind tunnel testing will be reported. The purpose is to investigate the aerodynamic performance of a joined-wing aircraft model under subsonic flow conditions. The resulting test model wings are both complex and thin, and hence significant challenges surround the use of conventional machining due to vibrations from the cutting tools and non-trivial wing thinness. In contrast, additive manufacturing technique was able to overcome these fabrication issues, with a faster turnaround time, less material wastage and ease of design. However, surface finishing and cost issues associated with the additive manufactured components were observed during the study. In particular, significant deflections of the additive manufactured component were observed during testing, which could have explained discrepancies found between the experimental and numerical simulation results. Nonetheless, possible ways to correct these discrepancies will be described and discussed here.
author2 School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
author_facet School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Teo, Zhen Wei
New, Tze How
Ong, Z. A.
Nagel, B.
Gollnick, V.
Pfeiffer, T.
Li, S.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Teo, Zhen Wei
New, Tze How
Ong, Z. A.
Nagel, B.
Gollnick, V.
Pfeiffer, T.
Li, S.
author_sort Teo, Zhen Wei
title Wind Tunnel Testing Of A Joined-wing Aircraft Model With Additive Manufactured Components
title_short Wind Tunnel Testing Of A Joined-wing Aircraft Model With Additive Manufactured Components
title_full Wind Tunnel Testing Of A Joined-wing Aircraft Model With Additive Manufactured Components
title_fullStr Wind Tunnel Testing Of A Joined-wing Aircraft Model With Additive Manufactured Components
title_full_unstemmed Wind Tunnel Testing Of A Joined-wing Aircraft Model With Additive Manufactured Components
title_sort wind tunnel testing of a joined-wing aircraft model with additive manufactured components
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84550
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41827
_version_ 1681057196704530432