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Variable cant angle winglets for improvement of aircraft flight performance

Joel Guerrero, Marco Sanguineti, Kevin Wittkowski

2020Meccanica72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Traditional winglets are designed as fixed devices attached at the tips of the wings. The primary purpose of the winglets is to reduce the lift-induced drag, therefore improving aircraft performance and fuel efficiency. However, because winglets are fixed surfaces, they cannot be used to control lift-induced drag reductions or to obtain the largest lift-induced drag reductions at different flight conditions (take-off, climb, cruise, loitering, descent, approach, landing, and so on). In this work, we propose the use of variable cant angle winglets which could potentially allow aircraft to get the best all-around performance (in terms of lift-induced drag reduction), at different flight phases. By using computational fluid dynamics, we study the influence of the winglet cant angle and sweep angle on the performance of a benchmark wing at Mach numbers of 0.3 and 0.8395. The results obtained demonstrate that by adjusting the cant angle, the aerodynamic performance can be improved at different flight conditions.

Topics & Concepts

Wingtip deviceLift-to-drag ratioDragClimbAngle of attackLift (data mining)Mach numberAerodynamicsAerospace engineeringDescent (aeronautics)Lift-induced dragComputer scienceMarine engineeringEngineeringData miningFluid Dynamics and Turbulent FlowsComputational Fluid Dynamics and AerodynamicsPlasma and Flow Control in Aerodynamics
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