Research on the Peristaltic Flow Acceleration Performance of Asynchronous and Duty Cycle Pulsed DBD Plasma Actuation

2014 ◽  
Vol 16 (9) ◽  
pp. 861-866
Author(s):  
Feng Li ◽  
Chao Gao ◽  
Borui Zheng ◽  
Yushuai Wang
2013 ◽  
Vol 421 ◽  
pp. 163-167
Author(s):  
Feng Li ◽  
Chao Gao ◽  
Bo Rui Zheng ◽  
Yu Shuai Wang

The boundary layer aerodynamic flow acceleration with one atmosphere uniform induced by multiple dielectric-barrier-discharge plasma actuation were studied based on PIV. Through double actuators alternating discharge, the multiple dielectric barrier discharge mode have been proposed and tested. The efficiencies of the plasma actuators in Pulsed-pulsed, Steady-steady, Pulsed-steady and Steady-pulsed discharge modes were explored. Based on the above results, the boundary layer flow acceleration performance of multiple plasma actuators has been discussed and the more efficient discharge pattern has been proposed. The results of this study indicate that the airflow acceleration effect of multiple plasma actuators mainly occurs in paraelectric direction and the pulsed-pulsed is the more efficient multiple plasma actuation mode.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Burak Karadag ◽  
Cem Kolbakir ◽  
Ahmet Selim Durna

Purpose This paper aims to investigate the effects of a dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasma actuator (PA) qualitatively on aerodynamic characteristics of a 3 D-printed NACA 4412 airfoil model. Design/methodology/approach Airflow visualization study was performed at a Reynolds number of 35,000 in a small-scale open-loop wind tunnel. The effect of plasma actuation on flow separation was compared for the DBD PA with four different electrode configurations at 10°, 20° and 30° angles of attack. Findings Plasma activation may delay the onset of flow separation up to 6° and decreases the boundary layer thickness. The effects of plasma diminish as the angle of attack increases. Streamwise electrode configuration, in which electric wind is produced in a direction perpendicular to the freestream, is more effective in the reattachment of the airflow compared to the spanwise electrode configuration, in which the electric wind and the free stream are in the same direction. Practical implications The Reynolds number is much smaller than that in cruise aircraft conditions; however, the results are promising for low-velocity subsonic airflows such as improving control capabilities of unmanned aerial vehicles. Originality/value Superior efficacy of spanwise-generated electric wind over streamwise-generated one is demonstrated at a very low Reynolds number. The results in the plasma aerodynamics literature can be reproduced using ultra-low-cost off-the-shelf components. This is important because high voltage power amplifiers that are frequently encountered in the literature may be prohibitively expensive especially for resource-limited university aerodynamics laboratories.


2016 ◽  
Vol 138 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Farzad Ashrafi ◽  
Mathias Michaud ◽  
Huu Duc Vo

Rotating stall is a well-known aerodynamic instability in compressors that limits the operating envelope of aircraft gas turbine engines. An innovative method for delaying the most common form of rotating stall inception using an annular dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasma actuator had been proposed. A DBD plasma actuator is a simple solid-state device that converts electricity directly into flow acceleration through partial air ionization. However, the proposed concept had only been preliminarily evaluated with numerical simulations on an isolated axial rotor using a relatively basic CFD code. This paper provides both an experimental and a numerical assessment of this concept for an axial compressor stage as well as a centrifugal compressor stage, with both stages being part of a low-speed two-stage axial-centrifugal compressor test rig. The two configurations studied are the two-stage configuration with a 100 mN/m annular casing plasma actuator placed just upstream of the axial rotor leading edge (LE) and the single-stage centrifugal compressor with the same actuator placed upstream of the impeller LE. The tested configurations were simulated with a commercial RANS CFD code (ansys cfx) in which was implemented the latest engineering DBD plasma model and dynamic throttle boundary condition, using single-passage multiple blade row computational domains. The computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations indicate that in both types of compressors, the actuator delays the stall inception by pushing the incoming/tip clearance flow interface downstream into the blade passage. In each case, the predicted reduction in stalling mass flow matches the experimental value reasonably well.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weiwei Hui ◽  
Huaxing li ◽  
Yin Shiqing ◽  
Afaq A. Abbasi ◽  
Xuanshi Meng

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Grazia De Giorgi ◽  
Giacomo Cinieri ◽  
Donato Fontanarosa ◽  
Antonio Ficarella

Abstract This work provides a numerical investigation of the effects of micro field emission dielectric barrier discharge (FE-DBD) plasma actuation on the performance of a micro-combustion system composed of two straights perpendicular microchannels for propellant injection followed by a rectangular micro-combustion chamber in a T-shaped planar configuration. Concerning the modeling, a novel two-step approach has been developed. The first step consisted in solving the chemistry of a sinusoidal plasma discharge in a zero-dimensional modeling. To this purpose, the collisional processes involved in the plasma discharge have been solved using a Boltzmann-equation approach, which permits to predict the electron impact reactions based on a two-temperature model. Furthermore, the zero-dimensional hypothesis used for computations assumed uniform plasma during the overall discharge duration. Concerning the plasma chemistry, excitation and de-excitation processes, electron-ion recombination reactions, attachment and detachment for electrons and neutral species have been considered in order to improve the prediction accuracy. This step allowed to quantify the body force, the heat source and the propellant composition modification induced by sinusoidal plasma actuation operating at 10 MHz of repetition rate, atmospheric pressure and 300 K temperature. Therefore, the predicted cycle averaged plasma effects have been used in 2D steady-state simulations of the laminar, compressible, reactive micro flow, based on a continuum Navier-Stokes approach. SIMPLE pressure-velocity coupling scheme was chosen with a second order pressure spatial discretization. A second-order upwind scheme was applied. The hydrogen-oxygen combustion has been modeled using the Connaire mechanism. The comparison between the results of the reference case without plasma actuation, and those retrieved in presence of plasma actuation at different supplied voltages, highlighted the performance enhancement due to plasma discharge.


2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 672-682 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Li ◽  
Chao Gao ◽  
Borui Zheng ◽  
Yushuai Wang ◽  
Zhe Lv ◽  
...  

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