Abstract

This study presents a new method for aerodynamic optimization of a civil aircraft fuselage. Typically, the fuselage is designed for minimum drag force at cruise conditions, which is essential for determining the flight cost. Evolutionary optimization methods, as a powerful tool, require the accurate computations of flows around several hundreds of candidate geometries, which in turn are too costly and time-consuming. One strategy is to use two-dimensional simulations that reduce the computational cost by at least one order of magnitude. This approach was applied in the current work, and the results were obtained with the aim of minimizing the drag coefficient and maximizing the lift coefficient. A genetic algorithm (GA) was used for shape optimization, and the objective function evaluation was carried out using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). A fuselage shape parameterization method is presented that accounts for important flow features. The 150-seat aircraft model designed in Amirkabir University of Technology was considered as a reference body. In the first step, the optimization is carried out for the single objective of minimizing the drag coefficient. Then, the multiobjective optimization is performed with the simultaneous drag coefficient minimization and lift coefficient maximization. Finally, the two-dimensional (2D) side view of the optimum fuselages is used for generation of the corresponding three-dimensional (3D) geometry. The results show that such 3D optimum fuselage reduced the drag coefficient by about 11% while increasing the lift coefficient by 29% in comparison with the original geometry.

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