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Jiajie (Terry) Wen
(Advisor: Prof. Dimitri N. Mavris)
will propose a doctoral thesis entitled,
An Integrated Framework for Evaluating Commercial Supersonic Aircraft Design Trade-Offs
Using Operations and Network Analyses
On
Monday, October 11 at 11:00 a.m.
Collaborative Visualization Environment (CoVE)
Weber Space Science and Technology Building (SST II)
Abstract
Since the Concorde performed its final flight in 2003, the world might finally see a new commercial supersonic transport (SST) by the end of the decade. Even though the COVID-19 pandemic has greatly affected the commercial aviation industry, an SST could allow operators to offer unique services and differentiate themselves from competitors when the industry recovers.
A civil supersonic aircraft can greatly boost the productivity of onboard passengers by significantly reducing trip time. However, this comes at a cost of additional fuel consumption and en-route noise generated in the form of sonic boom. Most countries currently prohibit supersonic overland flight, and such restriction is unlikely to be lifted for a large commercial supersonic aircraft. By analyzing the performance characteristics of SSTs, as well as the commercial aviation flight network and market demand, it becomes obvious that SSTs should be regarded as specialty products.
Traditional aircraft design is driven by a fixed set of design requirements. These requirements are imposed during aircraft sizing in the conceptual design stage, and followed by appropriate network and operations analyses. The relatively limited use cases of an SST mean that network-level analysis can be very useful for informing the definition of design requirements (such as supersonic cruise Mach number, design range, and passenger capacity).
This thesis attempts to address the lack of feedback between SST design requirement definition and its network as well as operations. The research will consist of three main steps:
Committee