pitch damping
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pooja Hegde ◽  
S. Nallayarasu

Abstract Hydrodynamic response of spar with appendages such as heave plate has been investigated in the past, mostly attached at the bottom of the spar. The effect of geometry and appendages on the hydrodynamic response of spar has been investigated in this article. A curved neck form with a heave plate near the free surface is proposed as an energy dissipation device for both heave and pitch responses. Numerical simulation using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is used for capturing the flow around the curved neck with heave plate and corresponding damping characteristics. CFD free decay simulations have been carried out to obtain heave and pitch damping and were noted to be higher than the conventional spar with heave plate at the bottom. Comparison of the proposed geometry and heave plate at the free surface with a conventional heave plate at the bottom of the spar has been made, and significant changes to the response and hydrodynamic characteristics have been noted. It is observed that the buoy form spar combined with the heave plate located near the surface (within 10% of the draft) helps dissipate energy and thus reduce the heave response.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 261-265
Author(s):  
Catalin PIRVU ◽  
Mihai Victor PRICOP ◽  
Jean-Philippe PRÉAUD ◽  
Louis WALPOT

Many re-entry bodies, even if they are debris or not, have nonlinear dynamic stability characteristics that produce oscillations in flight. The free-to-tumble techniques can be used to extract damping coefficient of specific body for planetary entry. The curve fitting approach is used to predict oscillatory behavior and the damping coefficient for the various test conditions of the wind tunnel obtained after the experimental data. The analysis presented provides an overview of the free-to-tumble test techniques and illustrates the effects of dynamic stability of the inter-stage tronconical system. It is proposed that these test techniques and curve fitting solution be refined in the future to better define the dynamic stability curves for the re-entry bodies.


In this study, an attempt is made to evaluate the effect of first arched ends on the damping derived due to the pitch rate aimed at the variable sine wave bounty, flow deflection angle δ, pivot position, and the Mach numbers. Results show that with the escalation in the bounty of the complete sine wave (i.e., positive amplitude) there is an enlightened escalation in the pitch damping derivatives from h = 0, later in the downstream in the route of the sprawling verge it decreases till the location of the center of pressure and vice versa. At the location where the reasonable force acts, when we consider the stability derivatives in damping for the rate of pitch q, there is a rise in the numerical tenets of the spinoffs. This increase is non-linear in nature and not like for position near the leading edges. The level of the stifling derivatives owing to variations in Mach numbers, flow bend approach δ, and generosity of the sine wave remained in the same range.


Drones ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 70
Author(s):  
Ye Bai ◽  
Srikanth Gururajan

This article describes the design, fabrication, and flight test evaluation of a morphing geometry quadcopter capable of changing its intersection angle in-flight. The experiments were conducted at the Aircraft Computational and Resource Aware Fault Tolerance (AirCRAFT) Lab, Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology at Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO. The flight test matrix included flights in a “Figure-8” trajectory in two different morphing configurations (21° and 27°), as well as the nominal geometry configuration, two different flight velocities (1.5 m/s and 2.5 m/s), two different number of waypoints, and in three planes—horizontal, inclined, and double inclined. All the experiments were conducted using standard, off-the-shelf flight controller (Pixhawk) and autopilot firmware. Simulations of the morphed geometry indicate a reduction in pitch damping (42% for 21° morphing and 57.3% for 27° morphing) and roll damping (63.5% for 21° morphing and 65% for 27° morphing). Flight tests also demonstrated that the dynamic stability in roll and pitch dynamics were reduced, but the quadcopter was still stable under morphed geometry conditions. Morphed geometry also has an effect on the flight performance—with a higher number of waypoints (30) and higher velocity (2.5 m/s), the roll dynamics performed better as compared to the lower waypoints and lower velocity condition. The yaw dynamics remained consistent through all the flight conditions, and were not significantly affected by asymmetrical morphing of the quadcopter geometry. We also determined that higher waypoint and flight velocity conditions led to a small performance improvement in tracking the desired trajectory as well.


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