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Finite-Element Analysis of a Mach-8 Flight Test Article Using Nonlinear Contact Elements

Richards, W. Lance (1997) Finite-Element Analysis of a Mach-8 Flight Test Article Using Nonlinear Contact Elements. Technical Report NASA TM-4796, Research Engineering, NASA Dryden Flight Research Center.

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Abstract

A flight test article, called a glove, is required for a Mach-8 boundary-layer experiment to be conducted on a flight mission of the air-launched Pegasus® space booster. The glove is required to provide a smooth, three-dimensional, structurally stable, aerodynamic surface and includes instrumentation to determine when and where boundary-layer transition occurs during the hypersonic flight trajectory. A restraint mechanism has been invented to attach the glove to the wing of the space booster. The restraint mechanism securely attaches the glove to the wing in directions normal to the wing/glove interface surface, but allows the glove to thermally expand and contract to alleviate stresses in directions parallel to the interface surface. A finite-element analysis has been performed using nonlinear contact elements to model the complex behavior of the sliding restraint mechanism. This paper provides an overview of the glove design and presents details of the analysis that were essential to demonstrate the flight worthiness of the wing-glove test article. Results show that all glove components are well within the allowable stress and deformation requirements to satisfy the objectives of the flight research experiment.

EPrint Type:NASA Technical Memorandum
Keywords:Computational methods, Finite element analysis, Hypersonic flight research, Nonlinear analysis, Structural design
Subjects:Aircraft/Project: Pegasus
(31 - 39) Engineering: (39) Structural Mechanics
ID Code:118
Deposited On:04 June 2004
Additional Information:17 pages. Presented at the Contact Mechanics 1997 Conference, Madrid, Spain, July 1–3, 1997.
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Last Modified: September 14, 2004
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