A team of
engineers at NASA and MIT have created a wing composed of hundreds of
tiny, identical pieces that are capable of morphing into the most
efficient shape for a given stage of flight. This could provide a
significant boost in aircraft production, flight and maintenance
efficiency.
Instead of the use of separate moveable surfaces,
the design incorporates a mix of tiny sub-assemblies bolted together to
form an open, lightweight lattice framework covered in polymer material.
The structure is comprised of thousands of tiny triangles in a strut
arrangement that combines the structural stiffness of rubbery polymers
and the lightness of an aerogel.
During each phase of a
flight, there is a different set of optimal wing parameters. Therefore a
conventional wing could be viewed as a compromise that is not
necessarily optimized for any of these phases.
The team used
the idea of an optimized, constantly deformable wing and took it a step
further. They designed a system that automatically responds to changes
in aerodynamic loading conditions by shifting its shape in response to
particular kinds of stresses.
“We’re able to gain efficiency by matching the shape to the loads at
different angles of attack,” said
Nicholas Cramer at NASA Ames in California, the paper’s lead author.
“We’re able to produce the exact same behavior you would do actively,
but we did it passively.”
You can find the full research paper from the May issue of Smart Materials and Structures here: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1361-665X/ab0ea2
Image Credit: Eli Gershenfeld, NASA Ames Research Center
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