Abstract

Conventional tube-and-wing and proposed blended-wing-body airliners must satisfy several design requirements, but the latter configuration is tightly integrated and sensitive to these requirements. In this work, blended-wing-body regional aircraft are investigated using a gradient-based mixed-fidelity multidisciplinary optimization framework centered on a Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes solver. In addition to sizing and cruise trim, design requirements considered include one-engine-inoperative directional trim, takeoff rotation ability, takeoff field length, initial climb performance, low-speed trim and static margin, and top-of-climb rate of climb. Results show how optimal design features vary and performance is overpredicted if critical design requirements are excluded and how key elements of geometric freedom help realize the potential of the configuration. A 4.8% block fuel burn benefit is enabled by pivot-piston variable-length landing gear even with low-mounted engines and high design freedom. The off-design constraints penalize block fuel burn by 3.2% if variable-length landing gear is considered, but this value reaches 7.6% if lower geometric freedom that inhibits tight cabin contouring and the formation of a novel forebody ridge is removed. Leading-edge carving is found to be optimal. The high design freedom and high-fidelity aerodynamics model help efficiently satisfy the design requirements, resulting in a cruise lift-to-drag ratio of 21.7 at 36,000 ft and Mach 0.78.

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