Cycloidal Rotor-Blade Tip-Vortex Analysis at Low Reynolds Number

AIAA Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 58 (6) ◽  
pp. 2560-2570
Author(s):  
James W. McElreath ◽  
Moble Benedict ◽  
Nathan Tichenor
2005 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 283-301 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Shyy ◽  
Peter Ifju ◽  
Dragos Viieru

Micro air vehicles (MAVs) with a wingspan of 15cm or shorter, and flight speed around 10m∕s have attracted substantial interest in recent years. There are several prominent features of MAV flight: (i) low Reynolds number (104-105), resulting in degraded aerodynamic performance, (ii) small physical dimensions, resulting in certain favorable scaling characteristics including structural strength, reduced stall speed, and impact tolerance, and (iii) low flight speed, resulting in order one effect of the flight environment and intrinsically unsteady flight characteristics. Flexible wings utilizing membrane materials are employed by natural flyers such as bats and insects. Compared to a rigid wing, a membrane wing can better adapt to the stall and has the potential for morphing to achieve enhanced agility and storage consideration. We will discuss the aerodynamics of both rigid and membrane wings under the MAV flight condition. To understand membrane wing performance, the fluid and structure interaction is of critical importance. Flow structures associated with the low Reynolds number and low aspect ratio wing, such as pressure distribution, separation bubble, and tip vortex, as well as structural dynamics in response to the surrounding flow field are discussed. Based on the computational capabilities for treating moving boundary problems, an automated wing shape optimization technique is also developed. Salient features of the flexible-wing-based MAV, including the vehicle concept, flexible wing design, novel fabrication methods, aerodynamic assessment, and flight data analysis are highlighted.


Author(s):  
M. Omri ◽  
S. Moreau ◽  
L. G. Fréchette

This paper presents the conjugate heat transfer in a submillimeter scale microturbine characterized by laminar yet highly three-dimensional flows. Such a miniature turbine is part of a MEMS (microelectromechanical system) power plant-on-a-chip currently under development for distributed power generation from waste heat. Adiabatic subsonic flows in the turbine have previously been studied numerically and are characterized by low Reynolds number laminar flow (Re < 2500) but with complex vortical structures. The present work addresses the influence of these flow structures on heat transfer, including the effect of the horseshoe and tip vortices. Calculations were done for tip clearance gaps equal to 0%, 5% and 10% blade height. Three different scenarios were considered: adiabatic walls, the hub and casing temperature of 573K or the hub at 573K and the casing at 450K, for incoming flow at 600K. The heat transfer is more variable in the suction side since dominant vortices are adjacent to this blade side. The heat flux even changes its sign where the vortices begin to separate from the suction side, indicating that gas cooled in the hub and casing boundary layers is transported on the blades by the horseshoe vortices. The tip vortex prevents the top passage vortex from interacting with the suction side, which eliminates the negative heat transfer in this region. Due to the dominant vortices, the Nusselt number is found to be a function of the thermal boundary conditions and cannot be predicted with traditional boundary layer correlations.


2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (8) ◽  
pp. 690-710
Author(s):  
Ronan Serré ◽  
Nicolas Gourdain ◽  
Thierry Jardin ◽  
Marc C. Jacob ◽  
Jean-Marc Moschetta

The demand in micro-air vehicles is increasing as well as their potential missions. Either for discretion in military operations or noise pollution in civilian use, noise reduction of micro-air vehicles is a goal to achieve. Aeroacoustic research has long been focusing on full scale rotorcrafts. At micro-air vehicle scales however, the hierarchization of the numerous sources of noise is not straightforward, as a consequence of the relatively low Reynolds number that ranges typically from 5000 to 100,000 and low Mach number of approximately 0.1. This knowledge, however, is crucial for aeroacoustic optimization and blade noise reduction in drones. This contribution briefly describes a low-cost, numerical methodology to achieve noise reduction by optimization of micro-air vehicle rotor blade geometry. Acoustic power measurements show a reduction of 8 dB(A). The innovative rotor blade geometry allowing this noise reduction is then analysed in detail, both experimentally and numerically with large eddy simulation using lattice Boltzmann method. Turbulence interaction noise is shown to be a major source of noise in this configuration of low Reynolds number rotor in hover, as a result of small scale turbulence and high frequency unsteady aeroadynamics impinging the blades at the leading edge.


2019 ◽  
Vol 252 ◽  
pp. 04006
Author(s):  
Tytus Tulwin

Maintaining a steady hover flight in a rotorcraft usually requires high energy input. The aim of the paper is to prove that it is possible to vastly reduce energy use in a rotorcraft by reducing the disc loading. The energy consumption reduction is especially important in electric rotorcraft, where the energy source is characterized by low energy density when compared to the hydrocarbon fuel in ICE rotorcraft. The paper presents results of CFD simulations on low Reynolds Number operating rotors. For low RE rotors tip vortex induced drag is highly affecting the rotor’s Figure of Merit, thus reducing rotor performance. Even though FM is reduced, the low RE setup is still beneficial in terms of reduced Power Loading, the main factor responsible for hover endurance.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 255
Author(s):  
Muhammad Zal Aminullah Daman Huri ◽  
Shabudin Bin Mat ◽  
Mazuriah Said ◽  
Shuhaimi Mansor ◽  
Md. Nizam Dahalan ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Vadim V. Lemanov ◽  
Viktor I. Terekhov ◽  
Vladimir V. Terekhov

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