On the vortex wake of an animal flying in a confined volume

1991 ◽  
Vol 334 (1269) ◽  
pp. 107-117 ◽  

When an animal flies near a boundary, the airflows it generates interact with that boundary. These interactions may have a significant effect on flight performance, as measured by quantities such as the energy rate to sustain flight, or the circulation of the vortices bound on the wing or shed in the wake (or, equivalently, by the lift and induced drag coefficients). The problem of hovering and slow flight within a confined volume is considered by a theoretical model based on helicopter practice, and by flow visualization experiments. The wake takes the form of a strong recirculating flow within the volume, and because of this recirculation the boundaries appear to cause a large reduction in the induced power required for sustained flight, even when their distance from the animal is several times greater than the wingspan. The correction factor relative to ideal momentum jet theory is greater than for the hovering ground effect, forward flight ground effect, or wind tunnel wall interference problems at comparable distances. The flow pattern that develops in the presence of floor and wall interactions in hovering or slow flight includes a large-diameter vortex ring trapped underneath the animal; this vortex ring is conjectured to be analogous to that below a helicopter in slow descending flight in the 'vortex ring state’. Performance measurements for animals in hovering flight within a confined volume may underestimate power for free hovering by a significant margin. Comparable boundary effects may also be important in confined forward flight. Because of speed-related changes in the wake, and the rise in induced power at lower speeds, the appropriate correction to total mechanical power is dependent on air speed, becoming progressively greater as speed reduces. Some wind tunnel measurements of total metabolic power have produced the apparently anomalous result that power is independent of flight speed within measurement error. These observations may be explained - at least in part - by boundary effects caused by interaction between the wake and the walls of the wind tunnel.

Author(s):  
Kun Chen ◽  
Zhiwei Shi ◽  
Shengxiang Tong ◽  
Yizhang Dong ◽  
Jie Chen

There is an obvious aerodynamic interference problem that occurs for a quad tilt rotor in near-ground hovering or in the conversion operating condition. This paper presents an aerodynamic interference test of the quad tilt rotor in a wind tunnel. A 1:35 scale model of the quad tilt rotor is used in this test. To substitute for the ground, a moveable platform is designed in a low-speed open-loop wind tunnel to simulate different flight altitudes of the quad tilt rotor in hovering or forward flight. A rod six-component force balance is used to measure the loads on the aircraft, and the flow field below the airframe is captured using particle image velocimetry. The experimental results show that the ground effect is significant when the hover height above the ground is less than the rotor diameter of the quad tilt rotor aircraft, and the maximum upload of the airframe is approximately 12% of the total vertical thrust with the appearance of obvious fountain flow. During the conversion operating condition, the upload of the airframe is reduced compared with that in the hovering state, which is affected by rotor wake and incoming flow. The aerodynamic interference test results of the quad tilt rotor aircraft have important reference value in power system selection, control system design, and carrying capacity improvement with the advantage of ground effect.


2002 ◽  
Vol 205 (16) ◽  
pp. 2461-2467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix Liechti ◽  
Lukas Bruderer

SUMMARYThe flight paths and wingbeat patterns of 39 barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) and 26 house martins (Delichon urbica) were recorded by tracking radar during the spring migration. Depending mostly on flight angle,hirundines performed anything from continuous flapping flight during climbing to single pulse-like wing beats during descent. Unlike most other passerines,hirundines rarely showed regular flapping and rest phases, allowing them to be distinguished from other bird migrants by radar echo signatures. Effective wingbeat frequency (Feff) was calculated as the mean number of wing beats per second, including non-flapping phases. Under comparable flight conditions, Feff was higher in house martins than in barn swallows. Within species, Feff values were higher during climbing and slow flying than during descent. Of the variance in Feff, 71 % could be explained by climb rate,air speed and species; similar results were obtained in the wind tunnel. Under comparable flight conditions, barn swallows and house martins in free flight had significantly lower values of Feff than individuals in wind tunnel experiments (by 40 % and 32 %, respectively). This difference may at least partly be due to the shorter wings of the juveniles tested in the wind tunnel during autumn. However, it seems unlikely that this can account for all of the large difference. It is suggested that wind tunnel experiments might overestimate birds' flight costs compared with free flight.


1970 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 363-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. CHRISTIAN PARROTT

1. A black vulture (mass = 1.79 kg) gliding freely in a wind tunnel adjusted its wing span and wing area as its air speed and glide angle changed from 9.9 to 16.8 m/s and from 4.8° to 7.9°, respectively. 2. The minimum sinking speed was 1.09 m/s at an air speed of 11.3 m/s. 3. The maximum ratio of lift to drag forces was 11.6 at an air speed of 13.9 m/s. 4. Parasite drag coefficients for the vulture are similar to those for conventional airfoils and do not support the contention that black vultures have unusually low values of parasite drag.


2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Gómez-Iradi ◽  
R. Steijl ◽  
G. N. Barakos

This paper demonstrates the potential of a compressible Navier–Stokes CFD method for the analysis of horizontal axis wind turbines. The method was first validated against experimental data of the NREL/NASA-Ames Phase VI (Hand, et al., 2001, “Unsteady Aerodynamics Experiment Phase, VI: Wind Tunnel Test Configurations and Available Data Campaigns,” NREL, Technical Report No. TP-500-29955) wind-tunnel campaign at 7 m/s, 10 m/s, and 20 m/s freestreams for a nonyawed isolated rotor. Comparisons are shown for the surface pressure distributions at several stations along the blades as well as for the integrated thrust and torque values. In addition, a comparison between measurements and CFD results is shown for the local flow angle at several stations ahead of the wind turbine blades. For attached and moderately stalled flow conditions the thrust and torque predictions are fair, though improvements in the stalled flow regime are necessary to avoid overprediction of torque. Subsequently, the wind-tunnel wall effects on the blade aerodynamics, as well as the blade/tower interaction, were investigated. The selected case corresponded to 7 m/s up-wind wind turbine at 0 deg of yaw angle and a rotational speed of 72 rpm. The obtained results suggest that the present method can cope well with the flows encountered around wind turbines providing useful results for their aerodynamic performance and revealing flow details near and off the blades and tower.


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 403-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neal T. Frink

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document