THE VISION
The vision is low-cost nonstop trips and commutes traveling at top speeds rather than being stuck in traffic jams, [airport] queues, and stop lights. The vision is a transit infrastructure that is so low-cost that under-developed countries leapfrog concrete/asphalt highways and parking lots, going straight to a transit system that quickly connects that country while preserving still-existing nature—it is a future where worldwide access to hospitals, education, and food is not limited by distances. It is a future where the USA has a shame for wasting so many resources on concrete and asphalt, but where the USA has a pride in bringing this better future to Earth.
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Why? How?
A BOOK ON THE IMMINENT CHANGES TO AIR TRANSIT ... AND SOCIETY
Copyright 2022
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1. Preface and A Very Important Question.
Chapter 2. The Science of Flight.
Chapter 3. Flaw of Our Ways in Aviation.
Chapter 4. Science of Optimization.
Chapter 5. Improving the Flat Plate Airfoil
Chapter 6. Vertical Takeoff Aircraft (Air Taxi).
Chapter 7. A Third Technology.
Chapter 8. Economic and Social Impact.
PART II
Chapter 9. Batteries and Overcoming Limitations
Chapter 10. Electric Power
Chapter 11. Solar Power
Chapter 1. Preface and A Very Important Question
Today’s airliners are on par with the most efficient modes of transit. And commercial aircraft have efficiencies 3X those of today’s airliner’s and 10X the cruising efficiency of helicopters (“VTOL”). And we already have aircraft capable of 24/7 flight. What would happen if airliners (and VTOL) were able to achieve the 3X (10X) increase in efficiency?
The answer is an unprecedented disruption on the status quo. That disruption is on both contemporary industries and political power of countries, since the technology both makes much of today’s infrastructure obsolete and allows for much-lower-cost infrastructure. The technology also provides a means to mitigate global warming while simultaneously improving standards of living.
What has held of this 21st Century Transit Revolution is the slow and fragile nature of aircraft like the Eta Glider that have >3X the efficiency of contemporary airliners.
A new technology referred to as “Towed Platform” aircraft will rapidly overcome the obstacles that have held back the 21st Century industrial revolution. Towed Platform airframes are robust, fast, and low cost. They are also ideal for solar panels, and similar advances in photovoltaic cells make the solar cells more productive and lower cost. Of course, above the clouds, solar power is already have the cost as solar power on Earth’s surface.
The 21st Century Transit Revolution will happen, and much will change.
Introduction to the Technology - Aerodynamic forces create aerodynamic lift by producing increased pressure on the lower surfaces of aircraft and decreased pressure on the upper surfaces. The pressure time area produced lift force with the vertical component being lift. This is an example of Newton’s first law which identifies an object will not change its motion unless a force acts on it. This science is the foundation of aerodynamic lift.
More specifically, an aircraft flying at a steady state (constant speed, direction, and altitude) has zero net forces acting on it. Applying a steady state vertical force balance on the control volume defined by the aircrafts surface results in the equation 1:
0 = mg + ʃ [nv P dS] (1)
Where m is the mass of the aircraft, g is gravitational acceleration, P is pressure, S is area, nv is the vertical component of the unit vector normal to the surface, and ʃ identifies a surface integral. The surface integral is the integral of the pressure over the surface of the aircraft acting the in vertical direction, therefore providing the net force of pressure on the aircraft for the creation of lift.
The two terms of Equation 1 are equal and opposite force terms leading to zero net force in steady-state flight. “mg” is the weight of the aircraft. Pressure action on a surface creates a force normal to that surface; the vertical component of that vector is lift and the horizontal component is drag. Equation 1 is the balance of vertical forces; it does not include the drag and thrust terms of a force balance which act horizontally.
Figure 1 illustrates an example aerodynamic surface. Aerodynamic lift is created by oncoming air’s momentum impacting the lower surfaces and the expansion of air above upper surfaces. As illustrated by Figure 1, a no-slip constraint causes air next to an upper surface to follow the surface while adjacent air’s momentum pulls and expands away from that surface, creating lower pressure.
For any point on the thin surface, the lift is cos(θ) ΔP dS, the drag is sin(θ) ΔP dS, and the lift- drag ratio (“L/D”) may be defined as cot(θ) where: θ° is air’s angle of attack, ΔP is the pressure difference between the top and bottom of the thin plate, dS is a surface’s area, and form drag is the total drag when neglecting shear drag. For a flat plate, θ° is constant, and the limit of a large or thin flat plate (negligible edge surface area) is,
L/D = 57/ θ° (at low θ°, less than 15 degrees, θ in degrees) (2)
The lift- drag ratio (“L/D”) is a measure of flight efficiency. The best jet aircraft have L/D between 15 and 21, and typical vertical takeoff aircraft have L/D < 5. Equation 2 identifies L/D of 114 < L/D < 57 for 0.5° < θ° < 1.0° for an ideal flat plate airfoil, which suggests that a more than threefold increase in fuel economy is possible.
Figure 2 provides a plot of L/D versus air’s angle for the Equation 2 estimate for a flat plate airfoil and for a typical airfoil. At low positive air angles of attack, the flat plate airfoil can exceed the performance of a typical airfoil.
Equation 2 takes into account neither shear drag of surfaces nor the form drag of front edges of an airfoil. These corrections are covered in Chapter 4. When well designed, the corrections start at less than 10%.
The traditional airfoil provides high stability during flight and produces a decent L/D ratio for maintaining air travel. However, significant increases in efficiency are possible with the flat plate airfoil.
A Very Important Question – If the objective of an aircraft is an L/D of 57:1, which is >3X contemporary airliners, Equation 2 identifies that any surfaces having an air angle of attack >1° will detract from performance. The conclusion is that to attain this high value of L/D, an abundance of substantially horizontal angle of attack (e.g., between 0.2° and 0.8°) is necessary.
In practice, higher pressures generated by steeper pitch angles can expand to flatter surfaces; this topic will be considered in greater detail in Chapter 8. But the need for the pressure to manifest to lift on these substantially horizontal surfaces for high efficiency is definitive in the science.
While discussions tend to be easier in terms of the positive pressures on the underside of aircraft, analogous science and conclusions apply to upper surfaces. To a first approximation, a thin airfoil of uniform thickness would generate lift from decreased pressure on the upper surface comparable to that generated on lower surfaces.
At flight efficiencies of 3X to 6X those of contemporary aircraft, the energy cost per payload is less than 20% (typically less than 10) that of contemporary aircraft. The reason: typically, about 25% of the weight of a typical aircraft is payload and 25% is fuel. The fuel is approximately constant in that 3X to 6X increase in efficiency, and so, at 3X the efficiency 5 parts payload correspond to 1 part fuel. This is 5X the efficiency (80% reduction) on a payload basis which is an underestimate since. Also, at this efficiency, solar energy and electric propulsion become the preferred technologies for essentially all aircraft and transit. It is a high impact technology for mitigation of global warming and improved low-cost infrastructure worldwide.
The science is correct. That very important question is, “Will it work?”. Does technology allow us to realize these major increases in efficiency that the benefits they bring? If we consider mankind to be intelligent and civil, this question should be answered and will publicized; either as new commercial aircraft or a definitive and clear evidence that it will not work.
Today’s airliners are on par with the most efficient modes of transit. And commercial aircraft have efficiencies 3X those of today’s airliner’s and 10X the cruising efficiency of helicopters (“VTOL”). And we already have aircraft capable of 24/7 flight. What would happen if airliners (and VTOL) were able to achieve the 3X (10X) increase in efficiency?
The answer is an unprecedented disruption on the status quo. That disruption is on both contemporary industries and political power of countries, since the technology both makes much of today’s infrastructure obsolete and allows for much-lower-cost infrastructure. The technology also provides a means to mitigate global warming while simultaneously improving standards of living.
What has held of this 21st Century Transit Revolution is the slow and fragile nature of aircraft like the Eta Glider that have >3X the efficiency of contemporary airliners.
A new technology referred to as “Towed Platform” aircraft will rapidly overcome the obstacles that have held back the 21st Century industrial revolution. Towed Platform airframes are robust, fast, and low cost. They are also ideal for solar panels, and similar advances in photovoltaic cells make the solar cells more productive and lower cost. Of course, above the clouds, solar power is already have the cost as solar power on Earth’s surface.
The 21st Century Transit Revolution will happen, and much will change.
Introduction to the Technology - Aerodynamic forces create aerodynamic lift by producing increased pressure on the lower surfaces of aircraft and decreased pressure on the upper surfaces. The pressure time area produced lift force with the vertical component being lift. This is an example of Newton’s first law which identifies an object will not change its motion unless a force acts on it. This science is the foundation of aerodynamic lift.
More specifically, an aircraft flying at a steady state (constant speed, direction, and altitude) has zero net forces acting on it. Applying a steady state vertical force balance on the control volume defined by the aircrafts surface results in the equation 1:
0 = mg + ʃ [nv P dS] (1)
Where m is the mass of the aircraft, g is gravitational acceleration, P is pressure, S is area, nv is the vertical component of the unit vector normal to the surface, and ʃ identifies a surface integral. The surface integral is the integral of the pressure over the surface of the aircraft acting the in vertical direction, therefore providing the net force of pressure on the aircraft for the creation of lift.
The two terms of Equation 1 are equal and opposite force terms leading to zero net force in steady-state flight. “mg” is the weight of the aircraft. Pressure action on a surface creates a force normal to that surface; the vertical component of that vector is lift and the horizontal component is drag. Equation 1 is the balance of vertical forces; it does not include the drag and thrust terms of a force balance which act horizontally.
Figure 1 illustrates an example aerodynamic surface. Aerodynamic lift is created by oncoming air’s momentum impacting the lower surfaces and the expansion of air above upper surfaces. As illustrated by Figure 1, a no-slip constraint causes air next to an upper surface to follow the surface while adjacent air’s momentum pulls and expands away from that surface, creating lower pressure.
For any point on the thin surface, the lift is cos(θ) ΔP dS, the drag is sin(θ) ΔP dS, and the lift- drag ratio (“L/D”) may be defined as cot(θ) where: θ° is air’s angle of attack, ΔP is the pressure difference between the top and bottom of the thin plate, dS is a surface’s area, and form drag is the total drag when neglecting shear drag. For a flat plate, θ° is constant, and the limit of a large or thin flat plate (negligible edge surface area) is,
L/D = 57/ θ° (at low θ°, less than 15 degrees, θ in degrees) (2)
The lift- drag ratio (“L/D”) is a measure of flight efficiency. The best jet aircraft have L/D between 15 and 21, and typical vertical takeoff aircraft have L/D < 5. Equation 2 identifies L/D of 114 < L/D < 57 for 0.5° < θ° < 1.0° for an ideal flat plate airfoil, which suggests that a more than threefold increase in fuel economy is possible.
Figure 2 provides a plot of L/D versus air’s angle for the Equation 2 estimate for a flat plate airfoil and for a typical airfoil. At low positive air angles of attack, the flat plate airfoil can exceed the performance of a typical airfoil.
Equation 2 takes into account neither shear drag of surfaces nor the form drag of front edges of an airfoil. These corrections are covered in Chapter 4. When well designed, the corrections start at less than 10%.
The traditional airfoil provides high stability during flight and produces a decent L/D ratio for maintaining air travel. However, significant increases in efficiency are possible with the flat plate airfoil.
A Very Important Question – If the objective of an aircraft is an L/D of 57:1, which is >3X contemporary airliners, Equation 2 identifies that any surfaces having an air angle of attack >1° will detract from performance. The conclusion is that to attain this high value of L/D, an abundance of substantially horizontal angle of attack (e.g., between 0.2° and 0.8°) is necessary.
In practice, higher pressures generated by steeper pitch angles can expand to flatter surfaces; this topic will be considered in greater detail in Chapter 8. But the need for the pressure to manifest to lift on these substantially horizontal surfaces for high efficiency is definitive in the science.
While discussions tend to be easier in terms of the positive pressures on the underside of aircraft, analogous science and conclusions apply to upper surfaces. To a first approximation, a thin airfoil of uniform thickness would generate lift from decreased pressure on the upper surface comparable to that generated on lower surfaces.
At flight efficiencies of 3X to 6X those of contemporary aircraft, the energy cost per payload is less than 20% (typically less than 10) that of contemporary aircraft. The reason: typically, about 25% of the weight of a typical aircraft is payload and 25% is fuel. The fuel is approximately constant in that 3X to 6X increase in efficiency, and so, at 3X the efficiency 5 parts payload correspond to 1 part fuel. This is 5X the efficiency (80% reduction) on a payload basis which is an underestimate since. Also, at this efficiency, solar energy and electric propulsion become the preferred technologies for essentially all aircraft and transit. It is a high impact technology for mitigation of global warming and improved low-cost infrastructure worldwide.
The science is correct. That very important question is, “Will it work?”. Does technology allow us to realize these major increases in efficiency that the benefits they bring? If we consider mankind to be intelligent and civil, this question should be answered and will publicized; either as new commercial aircraft or a definitive and clear evidence that it will not work.