VTOL X-Plane

The Vertical Take-Off and Landing Experimental Aircraft (VTOL X-Plane) program is an American research project sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).

The goal of the program is to demonstrate a VTOL aircraft design that can take off vertically and efficiently hover, while flying faster than conventional rotorcraft.[1] There have been many previous attempts, most of them unsuccessful.[2][3]

A helicopter with a conventional rotor layout has a theoretical top speed of 200 kn (230 mph; 370 km/h), after which it suffers from dissymmetry of lift. Some designs have successfully created hovering and high-speed aircraft, including the Bell Boeing V-22 Osprey tiltrotor that can fly at 275 kn (316 mph; 509 km/h) and the Sikorsky X2 compound helicopter that flew at 260 kn (300 mph; 480 km/h), but both made significant aerodynamic compromises to hovering efficiency or range. DARPA's goal is to demonstrate a VTOL aircraft that can achieve a sustained top speed of 300 to 400 knots (345 to 460 mph (555 to 740 km/h)).[1]

All competitors for the program opted to demonstrate their concepts using an unmanned aerial vehicle even though it was not required, but the technologies are intended to be applied to manned aircraft as well.[4]

Requirement and programme

DARPA announced the programme in February 2013 with a requirement to create a new aircraft that uses the best features from both vertical take-off landing technology and that used for conventional aircraft.[5] The hybrid aircraft will try to improve on four areas:

Phase One - Preliminary design study

The first two companies to be involved were announced in December 2013 when Sikorsky Aircraft was awarded a US$14.4 million contract and Aurora Flight Sciences was given US$14 million for preliminary design studies as part of the $47 million Phase One budget.[7][8]

On 18 March 2014, DARPA announced that Sikorsky, Aurora Flight Sciences, Boeing, and Karem Aircraft had been selected to compete for the VTOL X-plane. The four companies have based their designs on unmanned aircraft and will compete over the next 20 months. The name of Aurora's submission was revealed as the LightningStrike in February and although the design is unknown, the company has a history of producing ducted fan and hybrid propulsion aircraft. Karem Aircraft is expected to propose a tiltrotor aircraft with an optimum speed rotor. The Boeing PhantomSwift embeds twin lifting fans inside the fuselage with tilting ducted fans mounted on wingtips for lift and forward thrust; a scale demonstrator was built and flown by the company in 2013. Sikorsky has teamed with Lockheed Martin and has a "low complexity" design that combines fixed wing aerodynamics and advanced rotor control. A single design will be selected in autumn 2015 for a $95 million contract[9] to build a demonstrator in phase 2.[10]

In June 2014, Sikorsky Aircraft[17] and Aurora Flight Sciences were awarded Phase 1B program contracts, which include preliminary design, technology maturation, modeling and simulation, aircraft configuration, and component-level testing for their submissions.[18] Boeing was awarded a Phase 1B contract in August 2014,[16][19] Aurora was awarded its Phase 1B funding in September 2014,[20] and Karem was issued Phase 1B funding in December 2014.[21]

Phase Two

The Design, development and integration phase is expected to last 18-months Phase Two will allow companies to mature their designs.[6][7]

Phase Three

Phase Three will last 12-months from February 2017 to February 2018 and will be ground and flight tests of the experimental designs.[6][7]

References

  1. 1 2 DARPA Awards Contracts in Search of a 460 MPH Helicopter - News.USNI.org, 19 March 2014
  2. Warwick, Graham. "High-Speed VTOL -- DARPA Tries ... Again" Aviation Week & Space Technology, 24 March 2013. Accessed: 25 May 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Whittle, Richard. "The Next X-Plane" Air & Space/Smithsonian, October 2015. Accessed: 26 September 2015.
  4. DARPA’s Selects Four Developers for new X-Plane Program - Defense-Update.com, 18 March 2014
  5. "DARPA annonuces new X-plane programme". Flightglobal. 25 February 2013. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Vertical Takeoff and Landing Experimental Plane (VTOL X-Plane)". DARPA. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
  7. 1 2 3 4 "Sikorsky wins contract to build experimental VTOL aircraft". Flightglobal. 20 December 2013. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
  8. Niles, Russ (23 December 2013). "DARPA Wants 400-Knot VTOL". AVweb. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
  9. Richard Whittle. "Competition is fierce to build the airplane of the future". New York Post. Archived from the original on 11 October 2015. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  10. DARPA selects four bidders for high-speed VTOL X-Plane - Flightglobal.com, 18 March 2014
  11. Sikorsky's Rotor Blown Wing -- Look Familiar? - Aviationweek.com, 20 December 2013
  12. Aurora Wins DARPA VTOL X-Plane Program Contract - Aurora press release, 4 February 2014
  13. Richard Whittle. "The Next X-Plane". Air & Space Magazine. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  14. Darpa Awards Final VTOL X-Plane Contracts - Ainonline.com, 21 March 2014
  15. Boeing Phantom Swift Joins VTOL X-Plane Comp - Armedforces-Int.com, 25 June 2014
  16. 1 2 Boeing Gets $9M More to Develop Phantom Swift X-Plane - Defensetech.org, 28 August 2014
  17. Sikorsky moves forward with DARPA VTOL X-Plane project to design new military tiltrotor aircraft - Militaryaerospace.com, 9 June 2014
  18. Aurora Flight Sciences joins Sikorsky in next phase of project to design new tiltrotor - Militaryaerospace.com, 10 June 2014
  19. "Boeing proceeds into next phase of DARPA-sponsored Phantom Swift - Vertical Magazine - The Pulse of the Helicopter Industry". verticalmag.com. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  20. Aurora Awarded Funding to Continue Development of DARPA VTOL X-Plane Program - sUASNews.com, 30 September 2014
  21. Karem progresses to next phase of VTOL-X project - Shephardmedia.com, 18 December 2014

External links

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