Update 11-8-15: I am surprised that this article has not drawn more readership and comment than it has. This topic does really kill people.
Initial article: I first wrote this little commentary in July 2006, in response to questions from friends and colleagues, regarding the Airbus crash in NYC, where the vertical fin came off under hard rudder application during climb-out from takeoff. I used to send it by email as a small file.
This topic of properly joining composite structures to metal (or to other composite structures) with fasteners, just keeps coming up, again and again. I have noticed that a lot of outfits still fail to do this job properly. So, I thought I would put this article up for interested persons to use. Knowing the truth might save a life.
Original 12 July 2006 article ----
Here
is how we used to build composite rocket motor cases with pinned closures at
the old McGregor rocket plant (see Figure 1, where the "shims" are thin sheet steel stock). Weight
was at a premium, as was reliability. We used these for up to 5-inch diameter motors
up to 4000 psi maximum expected operating pressure with wall thicknesses away
from the joint under 0.10 inch. We even
used these externally un-insulated in situations with Mach 5 aero-heating by
friction. (Typically, these had around 0.1 inches of rubber
insulation on the inside to hold the 5000-6000 F fire away from the
carbon-epoxy that degraded at about 300 F.)
None of our pinned joints ever failed.
Figure 1 -- Pinned Joint in Composite Rocket Motor Cases
This (Figure 2) is typical of general industry practice joining composite (or plastic) to metal. This concept has long been used in automotive and consumer products, because it is cheap. It has also long been known to be very failure-prone. The idea is to try to spread the loads for lower stresses with a big washer, but it never really works that way. It always starts at a single point on each washer, unzips around it, then unzips from washer to washer.
The recent (as of 2006) fatal crash in NYC of an Airbus airliner operated by American Airlines, with a composite vertical fin, points out the need to do this joint correctly. It is necessary that there be some sort of metal attachment fittings for a bolted joint. These fittings would be “glassed-in” or otherwise made part of the composite fin structure.
Such
reports as are given to the public do not indicate exactly how this was done in
the Airbus design. That design must lie
somewhere between the extremes (“good” vs “bad”) pictured above.
However, reports do indicate that these attachment
fittings tore out of the composite fin structure, and were found still bolted securely to the
fuselage, sans fin. Reports also indicate that one of the pilots
applied full rudder deflection to correct an upset at low altitude climb-out conditions.
The
ability to use rudder, aileron, or elevator controls at full deflection, anywhere in the flight envelope, without fear of losing tail
surfaces, has been taken for granted in
American aircraft design practice since the early days of commercial
travel. (This stricture does not apply
to wings, of course.)
Reports
since the crash tell of a dispute between Airbus, American Airlines, and the pilots’ union over who was supposed
to tell the pilots they could not use full rudder deflection during
climb-out, and whether or not they were even
told at all by anyone. This is proof of
the foreign design not meeting generally accepted US expectations. It thus may not strictly meet FAR Part
25, either: a reciprocity issue needing swift resolution.
The
attachments tore out under side load to the fin. These conditions put tension on the interface
between the composite structure and the attachment fittings somewhere. That it failed, and that it needs an unusual flight
restriction, together are proof that the
attachment design had insufficient means of spreading a tensile attachment
force into the composite structure of the fin.
Thus it is probably not the right joint design.
The
right way to attach a composite fin to a metal fuselage is pictured below (Figure 3). This is an adaptation of the well-proven
layered interface used in the rocket motor pinned closure joint. The key criteria are (1) provide adequate
adhesive shear area to spread the tensile (and compressive and shear) loads into the composite structure by
shear, and (2) size the members and the
adhesive bond areas to take full deflection forces everywhere in the expected
flight envelope, and a little beyond
it, for safety.
No comments:
Post a Comment