Experimental Study on the Effects of Sideslip and Rudder Deflection Angles on the Aerodynamics of an Aircraft Vertical Tail at Low Speeds
Abstrak
The vertical tail plays a crucial role in aircraft directional stability and lateral control, especially during low-speed operations such as takeoff and landing. This study examines the effect of aircraft mass on vertical tail geometry through a statistical analysis of 65 design parameters from civil jet aircraft. Aerodynamic performance of a sub-scale Boeing 777-200 vertical tail model was further investigated in a low-speed wind tunnel under rudder deflections and sideslip angles. Experiments were conducted at freestream speeds of 20 and 30 m/s, corresponding to Reynolds numbers of 5 × 10<sup>5</sup> and 7.5 × 10<sup>5</sup>, with model blockage ratios below 2% in all configurations. Side force and drag coefficients were measured for rudder deflections from −30° to +30° and sideslip angles from −7.5° to +7.5°. Results show a nearly linear variation of side force with rudder deflection, while drag exhibits noticeable nonlinearity at higher deflections. At zero sideslip, increasing rudder deflection from 0° to 30° raised the side force coefficient from 0 to 0.65, with a maximum uncertainty of ±0.011, while drag coefficient uncertainty remained below ±0.0055. Furthermore, the application of positive or negative sideslip resulted in substantial variations in the side force coefficient, reaching values of up to ±1.1 depending on the direction. By integrating experimental data with statistical analysis of real aircraft geometries, this study provides reliable quantitative benchmarks and highlights the vertical tail’s aerodynamic importance.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (4)
Arash Shams Taleghani
Saeid Yektaei
Vahid Esfahanian
Soheila Abdolahipour
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2025
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.3390/fluids10110277
- Akses
- Open Access ✓