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Formulation of the multimission aircraft design optimization problem

Posted on:1999-08-16Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The Pennsylvania State UniversityCandidate:Straussfogel, Dennis MFull Text:PDF
GTID:1462390014468564Subject:Aerospace engineering
Abstract/Summary:
The conventional single-mission aircraft design optimization problem is reformulated to allow design and optimization for multiple missions.;Defining the aircraft mission as a set of continuous scalar variables leads to the concepts of mission vector and mission space. The multimission aircraft design optimization problem becomes one of optimizing a design for several different points in the mission space, simultaneously. In the limit, a design can be optimized simultaneously for all points in the mission space.;Mapping various points from the optimization design space into the mission space generates actual and theoretical optimum performance surfaces. The multimission optimum configuration is defined as the single configuration that minimizes the difference between the actual performance and the theoretical optimum performance. The multimission aircraft design optimization method can be applied over several distinct mission by summing the differences between actual and theoretical optimum performance, or over all possible missions by integrating the difference between the actual and theoretical optimum performance surfaces.;The concepts associated with the mission vector, mission space, and multimission optimum configuration are presented in mathematical form. The objective function for the multimission optimization problem is expressed both as a summation over discrete mission points and as an integral over the entire mission space. Mathematical expressions for objective functions based on both single and multiple objectives are developed and presented. A weighting function, emphasizing certain parts of the mission space over others, is also discussed.;The multimission aircraft design optimization method is applied to an elementary wing-design optimization problem for an executive jet. The optimization problem is solved numerically for single and multiple objectives, with and without a functional constraint. The effect of the different objective functions and the confounding effect of the mission-dependent functional constraint are discussed. The results obtained from the solution of the unconstrained wing-design optimization problem validates the multimission design optimization method in that the overall performance of the multimission optimum configurations is shown to exceed that of the configurations optimized for single missions.;An aircraft performance model and numerical optimization code, which were developed for the present work, are also presented.
Keywords/Search Tags:Optimization, Mission, Single, Theoretical optimum performance
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