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A knowledge-based system integrated with numerical analysis tools for aircraft life-cycle design

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 June 1998

WILLIAM J. MARX
Affiliation:
Boeing Defense & Space Group, Autonetics & Missile Systems Division, Duluth, GA 30155, U.S.A.
DIMITRI N. MAVRIS
Affiliation:
Aerospace Systems Design Laboratory, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, U.S.A.
DANIEL P. SCHRAGE
Affiliation:
Aerospace Systems Design Laboratory, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, U.S.A.

Abstract

An integrated design and manufacturing approach allows economic decisions to be made that reflect an entire system design as a whole. To achieve this objective, we have developed and utilized integrated cost and engineering models within a focused design perspective. A framework for the integrated design of an aircraft system with a combined performance and economic perspective is described in this article. This framework is based on the concept of Design Justification using a Design-for-Economics approach. We have developed a knowledge-based system that can be used to evaluate aircraft structural concept material and process selections. The framework consists of the knowledge-based system, integrated with numerical analysis tools including an aircraft performance/sizing code and a life-cycle cost analysis code. Production cost estimates are applied for evaluation of process trades at the subcomponent level of design. Life-cycle cost estimates are used for evaluation of process trades at the system level. Results of a case study are presented for several advanced wing structural concepts for a future supersonic commercial transport aircraft. Cost versus performance studies indicate that a high-speed civil transport aircraft with a hybrid wing structural concept, though more expensive to manufacture than some homogeneous concepts, can have lower direct operating costs due to a lower take-off gross weight and less mission fuel required.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
1998 Cambridge University Press

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