scholarly journals An Experimental Analysis on the Effects of Stagger on the Aerodynamic Forces of Tandem Wings

AVIA ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Parlindungan ◽  
S Tobing

This study is inspired by the flapping motion of natural flyers: insects. Many insects have two pairs of wings referred as tandem wings. Literature review indicates that the effects of tandem wing are influenced by parameters such as stagger (the stream-wise distance between the aerodynamic center of the front and the rear airfoil), angle-of-attack and flow velocity. As a first stage, this study focuses on the effects of stagger (St) on the aerodynamic performance of tandem wings. A recent numerical study of stagger on tandem airfoils in turbulent flow (Re = 6000000) concluded that a larger stagger resulted in a decrease in lift force, and an increase in drag force. However, for laminar flow (Re = 2000), increasing the stagger was not found to be detrimental for aerodynamic performance. Another work also revealed that the maximum lift coefficient for a tandem configuration decreased with increasing stagger. The focus of this study is to perform an experimental analysis of tandem two-dimensional (2D) NACA 0012 airfoils. The two airfoils are set at the same angle-of-attack of 0° to 15° with 5° interval and three variations of stagger: 1c, 1.5c and 2c. The experiments are conducted using an open-loop-subsonic wind tunnel at a Reynolds number of 170000. The effects of St on the aerodynamic forces (lift and drag) are analyzed

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shubham Jain ◽  
Nekkanti Sitaram ◽  
Sriram Krishnaswamy

Steady state, two-dimensional computational investigations performed on NACA 0012 airfoil to analyze the effect of variation in Reynolds number on the aerodynamics of the airfoil without and with a Gurney flap of height of 3% chord are presented in this paper. RANS based one-equation Spalart-Allmaras model is used for the computations. Both lift and drag coefficients increase with Gurney flap compared to those without Gurney flap at all Reynolds numbers at all angles of attack. The zero lift angle of attack seems to become more negative as Reynolds number increases due to effective increase of the airfoil camber. However the stall angle of attack decreased by 2° for the airfoil with Gurney flap. Lift coefficient decreases rapidly and drag coefficient increases rapidly when Reynolds number is decreased below critical range. This occurs due to change in flow pattern near Gurney flap at low Reynolds numbers.


Author(s):  
Boris A. Mandadzhiev ◽  
Michael K. Lynch ◽  
Leonardo P. Chamorro ◽  
Aimy A. Wissa

Robust and predictable aerodynamic performance of unmanned aerial vehicles at the limits of their design envelope is critical for safety and mission adaptability. In order for a fixed wing aircraft to maintain the lift necessary for sustained flight at very low speeds and large angles of attack (AoA), the wing shape has to change. This is often achieved by using deployable aerodynamic surfaces, such as flaps or slats, from the wing leading or trailing edges. In nature, one such device is a feathered structure on birds’ wings called the alula. The span of the alula is 5% to 20% of the wing and is attached to the first digit of the wing. The goal of the current study is to understand the aerodynamic effects of the alula on wing performance. A series of wind tunnel experiments are performed to quantify the effect of various alula deployment parameters on the aerodynamic performance of a cambered airfoil (S1223). A full wind tunnel span wing, with a single alula located at the wing mid-span is tested under uniform low-turbulence flow at three Reynolds numbers, Re = 85,000, 106,00 and 146,000. An experimental matrix is developed to find the range of effectiveness of an alula-type device. The alula relative angle of attack measured measured from the mean chord of the airfoil is varied to modulate tip-vortex strength, while the alula deflection is varied to modulate the distance of the tip vortex to the wing surface. Lift and drag forces were measured using a six axis force transducer. The lift and drag coefficients showed the greatest sensitivity to the the alula relative angle of attack, increasing the normalized lift coefficient by as much as 80%. Improvements in lift are strongly correlated to higher alula angle, with β = 0° – 5°, while reduction in the drag coefficient is observed with higher alula tip deflection ratios and lower β angles. Results show that, as the wing angle of attack and Reynolds number are increased, the overall lift co-efficient improvement is diminished while the reduction in drag coefficient is higher.


2018 ◽  
Vol 152 ◽  
pp. 02017
Author(s):  
Abdulkareem Shafiq Mahdi Al-Obaidi ◽  
Ting Chern Wei

Various non-conventional wing development shows potential in increasing the aerodynamic performance of airplanes. If the non-conventional wing only improves the aerodynamic performance by a small margin, conventional wing is still a better option for airline operators. This provides opportunity to continue research on non-conventional configurations that can greatly saves the fuel consumption. This research was conducted to examine the lift and drag of non-conventional wings at low subsonic speed and low angle of attack. Analytical method based on DATCOM was used to calculate the lift and drag coefficients of non-conventional cranked wing for comparison with experimental results obtained experimentally using Taylor’s wind tunnel (TWT). Experimental lift coefficient shows similar values with the analytical results but experimental drag coefficient had an average difference of 44%. The experimental setup and calibration of TWT were verified and further case studies on nonconventional wing model featuring trailing edge notches were carried out. Analysis of the results from case studies shows that generally the effect of varying the number of notches only had significant effect on drag reduction if the notch depth was higher. For flight condition that does not exceed 4° angle of attack, lower number of notches at higher notch depth had the best aerodynamic performance. On the other hand, for flight condition that requires cruise angle of attack that exceeds 4°, higher number of notches at higher notch depth had the best aerodynamic performance.


Author(s):  
Daksh Bhatia ◽  
Praneeth KR ◽  
Babu Rao Ponangi ◽  
Meghana Athadkar ◽  
Carine V Dsouza

Non-pneumatic tyres (NPT) provide a greater advantage over the pneumatic type owing to their construct which increases the reliability of the tyre operation and effectively reduces maintenance involved. Analysing the aerodynamic forces acting on a NPT becomes a crucial factor in understanding it’s suitability for practical implementation. In the present work, the aerodynamic performance of a NPT using CFD tool – SimScale® is studied. This work includes a comparative study of a pneumatic tyre, a NPT with wedge spokes and a NPT with hexagonal spokes (NPT-HS). The effect of air velocity, steering (yaw) angle and camber angle on the aerodynamic performance of the NPT-HS is evaluated using CFD. By increasing the steering angle from 0° to 15°, the lift coefficient decreases by 37% approximately at all velocities. Whereas drag coefficient initially decreases by 21% till 7.5° steering angle and then starts increasing. Increasing camber angle from 0° to 1.5°, both drag and lift coefficients goes on decreasing by approximately 7% and 27% respectively.


Author(s):  
Haibin Xuan ◽  
Jun Hu ◽  
Yong Yu ◽  
Jiaolong Zhang

Recently, numerous studies have been conducted to clarify the effects of corrugation wing on aerodynamic performances. The effects of the corrugation patterns and inclination angles were investigated using computational fluid dynamic method in gliding and hovering flight at Reynolds numbers of order 104. The instantaneous aerodynamic forces and the vorticity field around the wing models were provided to research the underlying mechanisms of aerodynamic effects of corrugated wing models. The findings can be concluded as follows: (1) the corrugation patterns have different effects on aerodynamic performance. The effect of noncamber corrugated wing is to decrease the lift and increase drag compared with a flat-plate when the angle of attack is less than 25° during gliding flight. The corrugated wing with a camber (corrug-2) after the valleys enhances the aerodynamic forces when angle of attack is higher than 35°. The valley inclination angle has limited effect on aerodynamic forces in gliding flight. (2) The lift forces of different corrugation patterns show significantly asymmetric during the upstroke and downstroke. The main reason leads to this phenomenon is the case that two sides of the corrugated wings are not symmetric around the pitching axis. The corrugated wing with only two valleys (corrug-1) changes the lift and drag very slightly. Corrug-2 produces larger peak during downstroke and smaller peak during upstroke. The increase in the inclination angle has limited effect on the aerodynamic forces. The possible reason for these small aerodynamic effects might be that the corrugated wings are smoothed by small vortices trapped in valleys. The main reason for the significant difference between plate and corrug-2 is that the recirculating vortices trapped in the saddle and hump reduce the pressure above the wing surface.


Aerospace ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 23 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Communier ◽  
Ruxandra Mihaela Botez ◽  
Tony Wong

This paper presents the design and wind tunnel testing of a morphing camber system and an estimation of performances on an unmanned aerial vehicle. The morphing camber system is a combination of two subsystems: the morphing trailing edge and the morphing leading edge. Results of the present study show that the aerodynamics effects of the two subsystems are combined, without interfering with each other on the wing. The morphing camber system acts only on the lift coefficient at a 0° angle of attack when morphing the trailing edge, and only on the stall angle when morphing the leading edge. The behavior of the aerodynamics performances from the MTE and the MLE should allow individual control of the morphing camber trailing and leading edges. The estimation of the performances of the morphing camber on an unmanned aerial vehicle indicates that the morphing of the camber allows a drag reduction. This result is due to the smaller angle of attack needed for an unmanned aerial vehicle equipped with the morphing camber system than an unmanned aerial vehicle equipped with classical aileron. In the case study, the morphing camber system was found to allow a reduction of the drag when the lift coefficient was higher than 0.48.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 175682931983368 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasir A ElAwad ◽  
Eltayeb M ElJack

High-fidelity large eddy simulation is carried out for the flow field around a NACA-0012 aerofoil at Reynolds number of [Formula: see text], Mach number of 0.4, and various angles of attack around the onset of stall. The laminar separation bubble is formed on the suction surface of the aerofoil and is constituted by the reattached shear layer. At these conditions, the laminar separation bubble is unstable and switches between a short bubble and an open bubble. The instability of the laminar separation bubble triggers a low-frequency flow oscillation. The aerodynamic coefficients oscillate accordingly at a low frequency. The lift and the drag coefficients compare very well to recent high-accuracy experimental data, and the lift leads the drag by a phase shift of [Formula: see text]. The mean lift coefficient peaks at the angle of attack of [Formula: see text], in total agreement with the experimental data. The spectra of the lift coefficient does not show a significant low-frequency peak at angles of attack lower than or equal the stall angle of attack ([Formula: see text]). At higher angles of attack, the spectra show two low-frequency peaks and the low-frequency flow oscillation is fully developed at the angle of attack of [Formula: see text]. The behaviour of the flow-field and changes in the turbulent kinetic energy over one low-frequency flow oscillation cycle are described qualitatively.


Proceedings ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (23) ◽  
pp. 1448 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iñigo Aramendia ◽  
Aitor Saenz-Aguirre ◽  
Unai Fernandez-Gamiz ◽  
Ekaitz Zulueta ◽  
Jose Manuel Lopez-Guede ◽  
...  

The increasing capability of Wind Turbine (WT) based power generation systems has derived in an increment of the WT rotor diameter, i.e., longer rotor blades. This results in an increase of the electrical power generated but also in instabilities in the operation of the WT, especially due to the mechanical fatigue loads generated in its elements. In this context, flow control has appeared as a solution to improve the aerodynamic performance of the blades. These devices not only increase lift coefficient but also reduce mechanical fatigue loads. This paper presents a detailed numerical analysis of the effects of placing a passive flow control element, a Gurney Flap (GF), in a DU91W250 airfoil. Moreover, a numerical study of the influence of the GF length on the aerodynamic performance of the blade has been carried out. This study is considered as a basis for the development of an optimization technique of the GF length for long WT blades.


2012 ◽  
Vol 225 ◽  
pp. 391-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammed Mahdi ◽  
Yasser A. Elhassan

This work aims to simulate and study the flow field around SAFAT-01 aircraft using numerical solution based on solving Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes equations coupled with K-ω SST turbulent model. The aerodynamics behavior of SAFAT-01 aircraft developed at SAFAT aviation complex were calculated at different angles of attack and side slip angles. The x,y and z forces and moments were calculated at flight speed 50m/s and at sea level condition. Lift and drag curves for different angles of attack were plotted. The maximum lift coefficient for SAFAT-01 was 1.67 which occurred at angle of attack 16° and Maximum lift to drag ratio (L/D) was 14 which occurred at α=3°, and the zero lift drag coefficient was 0.0342. Also the yawing moment coefficient was plotted for different side slip angles as well as rolling moment. The longitudinal stability derivatives with respect to angle of attack, speed variation (u), rate of pitch (q) and time rate of change of angle of attack were calculated using obtained CFD results. Concerning lateral stability only side slips derivatives were calculated. To validate this numerical simulation USAF Digital DATCOM is used to analyze this aircraft; a comparison between predicted results for this aircraft and Digital DATCOM indicated that this numerical simulation has high ability for predicting the aerodynamics characteristics.


2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
V. G. Chapin ◽  
E. Benard

The active control of the leading-edge (LE) separation on the suction surface of a stalled airfoil (NACA 0012) at a Reynolds number of 106 based on the chord length is investigated through a computational study. The actuator is a steady or unsteady jet located on the suction surface of the airfoil. Unsteady Reynolds-Averaged Navier–Stokes (URANS) equations are solved on hybrid meshes with the Spalart–Allmaras turbulence model. Simulations are used to characterize the effects of the steady and unsteady actuation on the separated flows for a large range of angle of attack (0 < α < 28 deg). Parametric studies are carried out in the actuator design-space to investigate the control effectiveness and robustness. An optimal actuator position, angle, and frequency for the stalled angle of attack α = 19 deg are found. A significant increase of the lift coefficient is obtained (+ 84% with respect to the uncontrolled reference flow), and the stall is delayed from angle of attack of 18 deg to more than 25 deg. The physical nonlinear coupling between the actuator position, velocity angle, and frequency is investigated. The critical influence of the actuator location relative to the separation location is emphasized.


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