Multi-Ducted Angled Rotor System

Votes: 16
Views: 2890

Traditional planar ducted fans can suffer from stall and drag in edgewise flight due to the high angle of attack at which air must turn into the rotors. This creates blade imbalance and instability in the aircraft that rely upon such fixed fan-in-wing designs. Solutions to solve the stall problem of ducted fans in edgewise flight have been sought for decades and is an active area of research. The Multi-Ducted Angled Rotor (M-DAR) solves stall and high momentum drag of traditional planar (90 degree) ducted fans in forward flight by lowering the angle at which the air flows into the duct. The M-DAR itself is comprised of fixed forward pitched ducted fans set at a 45-degree angle. This allows the M-DAR to function at higher transition speeds to enable efficient wing borne flight.

State of the art tilt-rotor aircraft such as the V-22 must rotate large heavy mechanical engines and their blades 90 degrees when transitioning. For tiltrotors this is an intensive and complex mechanical and aerodynamic process enacted within a very narrow flight envelope. Tilt-rotors also suffer from downwash onto their wings. In comparison, M-DAR aircraft can take-off, transition, and land by differential thrust of the fans. In other words, a drone or aircraft that uses the M-DAR propulsion system can accomplish this task as fast as the flight control computer provides the command. In addition, there are no heavy or complex actuators or control surfaces needed in an M-DAR aircraft. This makes M-DAR aircraft lighter, more survivable, and easier to learn than either helicopter or tilt-rotor designs.

The M-DAR is scalable. SpyDar has successfully developed and flown Group 1-3 prototypes in field environments. SpyDar is focused on larger 2 passenger eVTOL design called the M-Star. We see medical professionals are a highly valued public good. The time and cost to train such individuals devoted directly to the health of others is of significant worth to society. As such their time may be considered a limited resource. This is particularly noticeable in rural areas as more medical care facilities aggregate into urban centers. This trend moves patient care further away from rural and underserved communities and thereby decreases access and response time. SpyDar posits four use cases for the M-Star as a medical commuter transport support Critical Access Hospitals.

Surgical services are extremely valuable for CAHs. Rural hospitals are aware of the profitability of surgeries but have difficulty recruiting surgeons due to a lack of surgical workforce in rural areas. CAHs often resort to the use of locum tenens surgeons when unable to find local surgeons, which may lead to worse outcomes. A CAH that owned an M-Star could bring in either hospital based or locum tenens surgeons to augment their surgical capabilities. The study found that for each surgical service offered the annual net increase was $630,528 to the CAH. This is well above the anticipated per unit cost of the M-Star ($350,000) and annual sustainment and operating cost ($30,000).

Video

Voting

Voting is closed!

  • ABOUT THE ENTRANT

  • Name:
    Liza Pierce
  • Type of entry:
    team
    Team members:
    Liza Pierce, Stuart Dana, Thomas Johnson
  • Profession:
    Technology Entrepreneur
  • Number of times previously entering contest:
    never
  • Liza's favorite design and analysis tools:
    The M-DAR Propulsion System-favorite design (of course).
    SimScape- favorite analysis tools.
  • Liza's hobbies and activities:
    Robert A. Heinlein Novels-Starship Troopers
  • Liza belongs to these online communities:
    Vertical Flight Society and Hillsdale College
  • Liza is inspired by:
    People and Progress.....I am inspired by deep connections with like-minded people who help foster our society to learn different viewpoints and identify blind spots that get in the way of GREAT ideas.
  • Software used for this entry:
    Fusion 360
  • Patent status:
    patented