Flutter Aeroelástico (Aeroelastic Flutter)
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Definition
Uma vibração estrutural auto-excitada perigosa causada pela interação de forças aerodinâmicas, elasticidade estrutural e inércia em certas velocidades.
What Is Aeroelastic Flutter?
Aeroelastic Flutter is a potentially catastrophic dynamic instability in which aerodynamic forces, structural stiffness, and inertial forces interact to produce self-sustaining — and potentially divergent — oscillations. Unlike ordinary turbulence-induced vibration, flutter is self-exciting: each cycle feeds energy back into the structure, causing amplitude to grow until structural failure occurs if the speed is not reduced.
Flutter defines a critical boundary within the flight envelope known as VF (flutter speed). Regulatory authorities (FAA and EASA) require all transport category aircraft to demonstrate a flutter-free margin of at least 15% beyond the design dive speed (VD), typically around Mach 0.95 for narrow-body jets.
How It Works
Flutter involves the coupling of at least two structural modes — most commonly bending and torsion of a wing or control surface. When airspeed reaches the flutter boundary, aerodynamic damping goes negative: the structure extracts energy from the airstream rather than dissipating it.
- Classic wing flutter: Bending mode and torsion mode lock in phase at the flutter speed, typically 1–5 Hz for large transport wings.
- Control surface flutter: An unbalanced aileron, elevator, or rudder can flutter independently; mass balancing (adding counterweights forward of the hinge line) is the standard cure.
- Limit cycle oscillation (LCO): A mild, bounded flutter seen on some composite-materials structures where nonlinear stiffness limits amplitude without structural failure.
- Whirl mode: A coupling of propeller gyroscopic forces with engine mount bending, relevant to turboprops.
Key Examples
The Lockheed Electra (L-188) suffered two fatal accidents in 1960 due to propeller whirl-mode flutter following engine mount damage, leading to the Electra Airworthiness Directive and an extensive fleet modification. The development of the Boeing 787 wingbox required over 10,000 hours of aeroelastic analysis using computational fluid dynamics to ensure the composite wing's anisotropic stiffness properties did not create unexpected flutter modes.
Aircraft Examples
- Supermarine Spitfire: Early marks experienced aileron flutter above 450 mph (724 km/h); resolved through mass balancing.
- Boeing 787 Dreamliner: The composite wing uses tailored fiber orientation in the wingbox to push flutter speed well above VD.
- Airbus A380: At 845,000 lb (383,400 kg) MTOW, the wing flex during flutter testing reached 7.4 m tip displacement — one of the largest ever certified.
- Cessna 172: Horizontal stabilizer flutter was addressed in early production by adding anti-servo tab mass balance weights.
Related Terms
Caixão de asa (Wingbox)
O conjunto estrutural principal onde as asas se conectam à fuselagem, formando uma caixa de torção de longarinas, nervuras e painéis de revestimento.
Envelope de voo
A faixa definida de velocidades, altitudes, fatores de carga e ângulos de ataque dentro da qual uma aeronave está certificada para operar com segurança.
Estol
Uma condição em que uma asa excede seu ângulo de ataque crítico, causando perda súbita e dramática de sustentação.
Materiais compósitos
Materiais de engenharia avançados, como polímero reforçado com fibra de carbono (CFRP), combinando alta resistência com baixo peso para componentes estruturais de aeronaves.