An analysis of aerodynamic forces on a delta wing

1996 ◽  
Vol 316 ◽  
pp. 173-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chien-Cheng Chang ◽  
Sheng-Yuan Lei

The present study aims at relating lift and drag to flow structures around a delta wing of elliptic section. Aerodynamic forces are analysed in terms of fluid elements of non-zero vorticity and density gradient. The flow regime considered is Mα = 0.6 ∼ 1.8 and α = 5° ∼ 19°, where Mα denotes the free-stream Mach number and α the angle of attack. Let ρ denote the density, u velocity, and ω vorticity. It is found that there are two major source elements Re(x) and Ve(x) which contribute about 95% or even more to the aerodynamic forces for all the cases under consideration, \[R_e({\bm x})=-\frac{1}{2} {\bm u}^2 \nabla\rho \cdot \nabla\phi\quad {\rm and}\quad V_e ({\bm x}) = -\rho{\bm u}\times {\bm \omega}\cdot \nabla\phi,\] where θ is an acyclic potential, generated by the delta wing moving with unit velocity in the negative direction of the force (lift or drag). All the physical quantities are non-dimensionalized. Detailed force contributions are analysed in terms of the flow structures and the elements Re(x) and Ve(x). The source elements Re(x) and Ve(x) are concentrated in the following regions: the boundary layer in front of (below) the delta wing, the primary and secondary vortices over the delta wing, and a region of expansion around the leading edge. It is shown that Ve(x) due to vorticity prevails as the source of forces at relatively low Mach number, Mα < 0.7. Above about Mα = 0.75, Re(x) due to compressibility generally becomes the dominating contributor to the lift, while the overall contribution from Ve(x) decreases with increasing Mα, and even becomes negative at Mα = 1.2 for the lift, and at a higher Mα for the drag. The analysis is carried out with the aid of detailed numerical results by solving the Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations, which are in close agreement with experiments in comparisons of the surface pressure distributions.

1988 ◽  
Vol 92 (914) ◽  
pp. 145-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Rizzi ◽  
B. Müller

Summary A numerical method has been developed recently to solve the Navier-Stokes equations for laminar compressible flow around delta wings. A large-scale Navier-Stokes solution on a mesh of 129 × 49 × 65 points for transonic flow Mx = 0·85, α = 10° and Rex = 2·38 × 106 around a 65° swept delta wing with round leading edge is presented and compared with a correspondingly large-scale Euler solution. The viscous results reveal the presence of primary, secondary, and even tertiary vortices. The starting location of the primary vortex is seen to be quite different in the two solutions. In the viscous solution it starts at the wing apex, but in the Euler results it starts about one quarter chord downstream. The secondary reparations are also different, due to the up-lifting of the boundary layer in the viscous results, but to a cross-flow shock in the Euler computation. Comparison with experiment shows that the interaction between the primary and secondary vortices in the Navier-Stokes computation is obtained correctly and that these results are a more realistic simulation than the one given by the Euler equations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen Li ◽  
Peiting Sun ◽  
Hongming Wang

The leading-edge bulges along the extension direction are designed on the marine wingsail. The height and the spanwise wavelength of the protuberances are 0.1c and 0.25c, respectively. At Reynolds number Re=5×105, the Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes equations are applied to the simulation of the wingsail with the bulges thanks to ANSYS Fluent finite-volume solver based on the SST K-ω models. The grid independence analysis is carried out with the lift and drag coefficients of the wingsail at AOA = 8° and AOA=20°. The results show that while the efficiency of the wingsail is reduced by devising the leading-edge bulges before stall, the bulges help to improve the lift coefficient of the wingsail when stalling. At AOA=22° under the action of the leading-edge tubercles, a convective vortex is formed on the suction surface of the modified wingsail, which reduces the flow loss. So the bulges of the wingsail can delay the stall.


In this research, a software has been developed to investigate the effect of roughness and stiffness in twodimensional aeroelastic in unsteady viscous flow around oscillatory airfoil. In this simulation to solve the Navier-Stokes equations, finite volume method has been used in the code with a high resolution scheme for fluid and structure simulation in transonic flows. For this purpose, fluid and structural behavior is solved separately at each time step and the effect of each one on the other is considered. For computing convection term in transonic unsteady compressible flow, high order SBIC (Second and Blending Interpolation Combined) scheme based on discretization of Normalized Variables Diagram (NVD) is used. Here the technique of inlet velocity vector oscillation which is a simpler method in comparison with rather complicated methods such as dynamic mesh is applied. The two-dimensional motion equations are obtained from the Lagrangian equations which are combined with the aerodynamic equations. The results of validation show that the extracted data has a desirable accuracy and had good agreement to experimental data. The FSI results show that, 1: Lift coefficient in smooth surface is more than the rough surface and also the drag coefficient in rough surface is more than the smooth surface, 2: Shock strength is weaker in the rough surface, 3: The shock’s place has moved to leading edge in the rough surface, 4: The number of oscillations in rough surface is reduced, 5:The structural stability of the airfoil when the surface of the airfoil is rough is much greater than smooth surface, 6: Because the density of the air and the amplitude of the oscillations are small and also small effect on the lift and drag coefficients, can be ignored the added mass in this simulation method


Author(s):  
David Maltese ◽  
Antonín Novotný

Abstract We investigate the error between any discrete solution of the implicit marker-and-cell (MAC) numerical scheme for compressible Navier–Stokes equations in the low Mach number regime and an exact strong solution of the incompressible Navier–Stokes equations. The main tool is the relative energy method suggested on the continuous level in Feireisl et al. (2012, Relative entropies, suitable weak solutions, and weak–strong uniqueness for the compressible Navier–Stokes system. J. Math. Fluid Mech., 14, 717–730). Our approach highlights the fact that numerical and mathematical analyses are not two separate fields of mathematics. The result is achieved essentially by exploiting in detail the synergy of analytical and numerical methods. We get an unconditional error estimate in terms of explicitly determined positive powers of the space–time discretization parameters and Mach number in the case of well-prepared initial data and in terms of the boundedness of the error if the initial data are ill prepared. The multiplicative constant in the error estimate depends on a suitable norm of the strong solution but it is independent of the numerical solution itself (and of course, on the discretization parameters and the Mach number). This is the first proof that the MAC scheme is unconditionally and uniformly asymptotically stable in the low Mach number regime.


2013 ◽  
Vol 444-445 ◽  
pp. 286-292
Author(s):  
Bing Han ◽  
Min Xu ◽  
Xi Pei ◽  
Xiao Min An

The effect of slender body on the rolling characteristics of a double delta wing is found by comparing the numerical simulation results of the double delta wing and wing-body configuration. The coupled computation system solving the Navier-Stokes equations and the rolling motion equation alternatively to obtain the unsteady vortical flow around the two configurations while rolling. The results conclusively showed the upwash effect of the slender body enhanced the energy of strake vortex and merged vortex.The aerodynamic lag of double delta wing is weak, contrarily, the time lag effect of the wing-body configuration is significant. The asymmetry vortices structure nearby the trailing edge are believed to be the main reason for the unsteady time lag effect.


Author(s):  
Wei Li ◽  
Hua Ouyang ◽  
Zhao-hui Du

To give insight into the clocking effect and its influence on the wake transportation and its interaction, the unsteady three-dimensional flow through a 1.5-stage axial low pressure turbine is simulated numerically using a density-correction based, Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes equations commercial CFD code. The 2nd stator clocking is applied over ten equal tangential positions. The results show that the harmonic blade number ratio is an important factor affecting the clocking effect. The clocking effect has a very small influence on the turbine efficiency in this investigation. The efficiency difference between the maximum and minimum configuration is nearly 0.1%. The maximum efficiency can be achieved when the 1st stator wake enters the 2nd stator passage near blade suction surface and its adjacent wake passes through the 2nd stator passage close to blade pressure surface. The minimum efficiency appears if the 1st stator wake impinges upon the leading edge of the 2nd stator and its adjacent wake of the 1st stator passed through the mid-channel in the 2nd stator.


Author(s):  
L. Bal ◽  
A. Kost ◽  
M. Fiebig ◽  
N. K. Mitra

The adequate understanding of the flow structure in fluid couplings is necessary for the optimized design of such devices. Up to now, empiricism plays an important role in design. Detailed studies of the unsteady 3D flow and torque transmission in fluid couplings were rarely carried out. In this paper the unsteady Reynolds time-averaged Navier-Stokes equations coupled with the k-ε model have been solved by a finite-volume method. The calculations were done by using boundary-fitted grids with non-staggered variable arrangement for a rotating frame of reference. Flow structures in fluid couplings were obtained. The results give insights into the physical process of torque transmission. A comparsion of the calculated torque transimission with the experimental measurements in the literature shows good agreement for low slip.


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