The experimental results are presented in this section in form of crossflow vorticity distribution, global (lift, drag and pitching moment coefficients) and local aerodynamic coefficients (surface pressure coefficients). The investigation focuses on the sensitivity of the aerodynamic characteristics to the variation of Reynolds number
and relative roughness size
at high angles of attack
. First, the flow field at
and the vortex development with increasing angle of attack based on spanwise pressure coefficient distribution is discussed (
Section 3.1 and
Section 3.2, respectively). Second, the effect of parametric variation on the global and the local mean aerodynamic coefficients are assessed (
Section 3.3 and
Section 3.4). Third, the velocity fluctuations in the flow field of the vortex breakdown inducing pressure fluctuations on the wing surface are discussed for selected configurations (
Section 3.5 and
Section 3.6).
3.2. Mean Pressure Coefficient Distribution
Figure 6 includes the distribution of the mean pressure coefficient
in the crossflow plane at
. The natural transition case is presented, in which the freestream Reynolds number is set at
and the angle of attack increases from
to
with
increments. The suction peak designates the lateral position and the strength of the primary leading-edge vortex. With increasing
(direction showed by arrows in
Figure 6), the vortex moves inboard and increases in diameter, while the suction level drops. The development of the pressure distribution shown in
Figure 6 with varying
at a fixed chord location is similar to the downstream vortex development (increasing
) at a fixed
(see also pressure coefficient distributions in
Section 3.2 and
Section 3.3). As such, vortex breakdown and, eventually, vortex dissipation is measured at that longitudinal location. The
-curve of the upper side is flattening towards stall. This occurs at
, according to the lift polar in
Figure 7. Up to this incidence, a vortical structure related to vortex breakdown exists over the entire wing. At this point, vorticity feeding from the separated shear layer ceases to increase. Beyond this high angle of attack, the vortical structure becomes unstable and collapses. Wake flow with constant pressure level that increases with
is present over the wing (blue curves). On the wing’s lower side, two inboard sensors register the typical pressure increase with
. Near the leading edge, however, the flow accelerates and the pressure decreases. This behaviour is observed prior to stall (black curves). During post-stall, a nose-up tendency increases the pressure even at this outboard location (blue curves). The vortex development in
Figure 6 represents the unperturbed flow (
), but describes the flow physics of all investigated cases. The effect of Reynolds number and disturbance height on the steady and unsteady pressure coefficients are discussed subsequently.
3.3. Reynolds Number Effect
Smooth wall separation is generally dependent on the Reynolds number. Increasing
leads to decreasing viscous forces with respect to inertia forces. In this case, the additional kinetic energy of the boundary layer mitigates wall separation. In the current work, the freestream Reynolds number is varied in a relative narrow range of
. The lift coefficients show no significant dependency on the Reynolds number (
Figure 7). Prior to stall, the lift increases approximately linear with the angle of attack following a slight slope decrease. In this angle of attack range, the Reynolds number variation has no effect on the coefficients. However, the largest deviations are observed around stall (
). At these very high angles of attack, the flow field is dominated by vortex collapse, which is more sensitive to
than the vortex dominated flow field. The slightly higher lift coefficient measured at
is caused by a more upstream blunt leading-edge separation, where the adverse pressure gradient is more pronounced due to high incidence. As seen in
Figure 7b, the Reynolds-dependent stall behaviour differs slightly from case to case. For natural transition, a clear lift increase at
is observed when the Reynolds number is reduced to
. In contrast, the lift coefficients at both highest freestream Reynolds numbers are similar. While the trip-dot case demonstrates no clear Reynolds number dependency, the cases with carborundum grit strip at the leading edge have increased
values for the lowest investigated Reynolds number. During post-stall no clear
-influence is observed for these cases.
The Reynolds number variation has a more noticeable effect on the case with trip dots (
). For this case particularly, the pitching-moment coefficient
increases with decreasing Reynolds number in a wide angle of attack range of
(
Figure 8). Under these conditions, the primary vortex is developed over a major wing portion. Hence, the Reynolds number dependent pitching moment coefficient is generated by Reynolds number dependent separation onset location. Evidence for this can be found in the pressure distribution measured at varying freestream conditions (discussed below). By comparing
Figure 8 and
Figure 9b a clear pattern is observed: Reynolds number decrease has the same effect on the moment coefficient as the leading-edge roughness height increase.
Figure 10 displays the mean pressure coefficient
as function of the local relative span position
, for
and
. The results represent
, at which the leading edge vortex originates around
. Upstream, the flow follows the leading-edge shape, generating high suction at
. Due to the downstream decreasing leading-edge radius, on the one hand, and to boundary-layer momentum loss caused by a longer pressure-side run length, on the other hand, separation starts at the wing tip. The separated shear layer rolls up into a vortex that increases suction. The suction peak decreases and flattens rapidly downstream of
indicating vortex breakdown. In contrast to slender delta wings, the primary vortex of semi-slender wings, breaks down early over the wing even at low incidences.
The difference between the pressure distributions caused by
-variation shows the associated sensitivity of the vortex separation onset and, consequently, the vortex position. The incipient vortex separation is most sensitive to the freestream Reynolds number for the configuration with trip dots. This results from the relation between the disturbance height
and the critical roughness height
. According to [
21], a laminar boundary layer transitions to turbulence if
. A disturbance below this threshold is dampened because of the viscous forces that dominate with decreasing wall distance. Thus, the instability leading to transition is delayed or not triggered. To that effect, the height and the streamwise position of the tripping devices is crucial for a forced boundary layer transition without reversing the effect (overtripping). The optimal tripping device has been extensively investigated in [
14]. The trip dots (
) proved to be the best candidate although the estimated critical roughness height for zero-pressure-gradient boundary layer is approximately three times lower. The chosen disturbance height is necessary to destabilize the rather stable accelerated flow between the separating streamline of the lower side and the leading edge. The Reynolds number decrease from
to
(see
Figure 10) leads to a boundary layer thickening and an increase of
, eventually above the disturbance height. As effect, the disturbance is not high enough to trigger transition and premature laminar separation may take place. In conclusion, the decrease in Reynolds number for a fixed critical roughness height has the same effect on the flow as the reduction of the supercritical disturbance height (see
Figure 11).
3.4. Leading-Edge Roughness Effect
The aerodynamic coefficients of lift
, drag
and pitching moment
are plotted in
Figure 9 as function of angle of attack
for all investigated relative leading-edge roughness heights
. In addition to the experiments in [
14], the measured incidence range,
, includes pre-stall, stall and post-stall flight regimes, which is the focus of the present study. All measured relative disturbance heights are compared:
(natural transition), 0.019% (trip dots), 0.025%, 0.069%, 0.125% and 0.250% (grit surfaces). The results refer to measurements carried out at freestream Reynolds numbers of
and
. The comparison is justified by the Reynolds-number insensitivity on the global coefficients in the range
for all supercritical disturbances (see above).
Up to the pre-stall regime,
, the lift coefficient shows no significant dependency on
(see
Figure 9a). The lift increase is nearly linear. Before reaching stall, the
-gradient decreases. This lift slope is typical for blunt non-slender wing configurations: the vortical lift portion is barely measurable, concluding the formation of a rather weak vortex [
22]. The maximum lift is reached at
–
for all measured cases. Above this incidence, however, the lift coefficient slopes diverge. The natural transition and the forced transition with trip dots (designated as red squares and blue deltas, respectively) have similar lift coefficients, with highest values during post-stall. For
, the extremely overtripped cases,
(pink right triangles) and
(orange diamonds) produce the lowest lift coefficients, compared to other disturbance heights. In between these curves lie the moderately overtripped configurations,
(black circles) and
(green gradient). The latter configuration has lift coefficients lower than the previous one. This concludes a clear negative correlation between roughness height and post-stall lift coefficient: with increasing roughness, stall is more abrupt and occurs at lower incidences. However, this trend reaches a saturation region. Although the increase in roughness height between the roughest configurations is disproportionately larger than for the rest, these cases have similar lift coefficients. The reason is that the roughness height reaches the boundary layer edge. In comparison, the estimated turbulent boundary layer thickness of a hydraulically rough flat plate at
x = 0.01 m distance from the edge, at similar flow conditions is
0.4 mm [
23]). Therefore, the disturbance at the leading edge reaches the accelerated outer flow, leading to premature separation, which does not shift with further
increase.
The roughness effect on the pitching-moment coefficient is displayed in
Figure 9b. The trend discussed in [
14] is reproduced in the current study, supplemented by the larger roughness heights and angles of attack up to post-stall. The observation from the previous work is valid as well for the additional configurations, with
and
. For positive angles of attack up to
, all pitching-moment curves coincide and have a linear development with
. In the range
, the pitching-moment slope becomes nonlinear and decreases continuously. The nonlinearity is associated with the leading-edge separation and vortex development, which is strongly dependent on the tripping method. In [
14] the trip-dot case showed reproducible delayed separation at the leading edge due to the forced laminar-turbulent transition. In the current investigation as well, trip dots successfully delay leading-edge separation, thus, increasing the vortex lift aft of the relative moment reference point
. As a result, the pitching moment coefficient decreases with respect to other cases. Without any forced boundary-layer tripping, leading-edge separation occurs at lower incidences generating a higher pitching moment than forced transition (red squares in
Figure 9). A disturbance height increase (above
) promotes flow separation leading to a vortex upstream shift. In consequence, more vorticity is fed aft of
. As a result, the pitching moment rises with the leading-edge roughness height.
At , however, the above discussed relationship between overtripped roughness height and the pitching moment loses its validity. The negative slope is the steepest for both roughest leading edges ( and ). These two cases reach the minimum pitching-moment coefficient of at . The other tripped cases have a slightly lower -minimum at , while the free-transition -gradient changes its sign at the highest angle of attack, . By increasing beyond , the pitching-moment rises again with a strong dependency on : increasing the tripping height causes steeper pitching-moment slopes and minimum pitching moment at lower angles of attack.
Equivalent to the pitching moment, the trend of the drag coefficient (see
Figure 9c) can be roughly divided into three regions: the region with predominantly attached flow (
), the vortex-development region (
) and the stall region (
).
Figure 9d shows a zoom-in part of the drag polar, where the roughness effect on the drag coefficient at low angles of attack is evidenced. Error bars for two configurations, clean and with trip dots, demonstrate that the difference in drag between tripping methods is greater than the measurement uncertainty. In the first region, drag is predominantly caused by wall friction. The clean configuration produces the lowest drag due to longest laminar region. Roughening the surface increases wall shear and, consequently, drag. In the second
-region, vortex growth causes a lift-dependent drag increase. The configuration with trip dots has the largest region of attached flow around the leading edge, resulting in the highest leading-edge suction and the least drag. With increasing angle of attack, the blue curve diverges from the rest towards lower
values caused by increasing thrust force at the leading edge. The
curve corresponding to natural transition is closest to the next roughest grit strip,
. Both cases have similar vortex position and strength, as seen in the spanwise load distribution of
Figure 11. Consistent with the other global aerodynamic coefficients,
increases with the roughness height. Maximum drag is reached for all configurations at slightly higher angles of attack than maximum lift. During stall, the leading-edge suction force decreases rapidly with increasing
contributing to drag increase while lift values stagnate. As the vortex collapses over the wing and a constant pressure wake flow dominates, a further increase in angle of attack reduces both lift and drag coefficients, as the pressure rises on the suction side. The pitching moment has its extremum at higher angles of attack than the lift, as well. Under these conditions, the collapse of the vortex is responsible for the
rise. This phenomenon shows a strong dependency on the tripping method. The post-stall curves of the coefficients
and
follow the same trend: While increasing the angle of attack, vortex collapse is promoted with increased leading-edge roughness heights, accelerating stall. At post-stall, the aerodynamic coefficients are stationary for leading-edge roughness heights above
.
Figure 11 and
Figure 12 compare pressure coefficient distributions for all investigated dimensionless roughness heights
. At
and
, the primary vortex is developed over the entire measured wing portion (
Figure 11). Only with trip dots, the flow is attached at
. In the apex region, the flow is strongly dependent on the roughness height. As expected, the delayed separation around the wing with trip dots generates the most concentrated vortex. Its position is farthest outboard and generates the highest suction (
at
). Excluding the natural transition case, the vortex position and strength is correlated with the roughness height at the leading edge: increased disturbance height leads to a farther inboard vortex location and a larger vortex cross section. Both effects are caused by premature separation and a wider separated shear layer, that rolls up into the primary vortex. Downstream, spanwise pressure curves flatten and tend to converge. Thus, the flow field becomes less dependent on the leading-edge roughness height at sufficient downstream distance from the vortex breakdown location.
Figure 12 consolidates the roughness effect on the post-stall aerodynamic coefficients discussed above. At
, the highest suction is present for the clean and trip-dot case explaining the increased
and
values. In addition, these cases have a distinct pressure coefficient distribution in the apex region (
). Starting from the leading edge, the pressure increases inboards, after which it decreases mildly, reaching its negative peak in the symmetry plane. This suggests that reattachment is still present in this chord section. In contrast, the overtripped cases have a nearly constant pressure distribution in all measured crossflow planes, which is typical for stalled wings. The dead water region over the diamond wing can be well influenced by applying different roughness heights. At the leading edge, flow disturbances with amplitudes proportional to the applied roughness height are induced in the shear layer. By increasing the disturbance amplitude, the turbulent mixing is promoted in the shear layer. Therefore, the shear layer is expected to thicken with higher disturbances. The shear layer thickness influences the volume of the enclosed dead-water region and, therefore, the wake pressure. From a flight mechanics point of view, the roughness height increase accelerates the vortex collapse during stall, generating a steeper stall behaviour (see
Figure 9).
3.5. Analysis of Transient Surface Pressure Coefficient
Time-dependent pressure coefficients have been determined at specific locations placed on the wing’s upper surface (see
Section 2.3.3). The resulting time sequences of pressure coefficient fluctuations
are shown e.g., in
Figure 13. The corresponding mean values are already included in the pressure coefficient distribution of the previous subsections. The first graph (
Figure 13a) represents the pressure signal measured by the most upstream, inboard sensor at different angles of attack,
. The discussed case represents natural transition. At
, the sensor is located at the inboard edge of the vortex (compare location
in
Figure 6). With increasing angle of attack, the vortex grows and its breakdown location shifts upstream. Hence, the recorded pressure signal changes accordingly. Amplitudes and high frequency oscillations are dampened with increasing angle of attack. In
Figure 13b, a similar pattern is observed in the downstream signal evolution at
. At the angle of attack of
, the vortex is positioned above the outboard unsteady pressure sensors (compare
Figure 11). Hence, the fluctuations underneath the primary vortex are displayed. In this graph, the signals are measured simultaneously, but no clear downstream correlation between signals can be determined. This indicates that the instabilities in the flow field are rather local and that there are no large flow structures, i.e., discrete vortices extending
chord length downstream. The breakdown flow shows a more broadband turbulence pattern than for slender swept wings, as observed also by [
8].
In
Figure 14, transient pressure coefficients at
are analysed statistically for all angles of attack. The time averaged pressure coefficient
(empty circles) decreases linearly with the angle of attack (inverse
y-axis), as long as the flow is attached. Separation occurs when the pressure slope changes sign twice. The following abrupt suction increase is generated by the increasing vortex strength. After minimum pressure is reached, a further increase in
leads to a slow pressure rise, associated with vortex breakdown. A small plateau is present around stall, when vortex collapse is expected, followed by further pressure rise during post-stall.
The right ordinates in
Figure 14 represent the rms value. At incidences with predominantly attached flow,
, the fluctuations are very small, but rise rapidly as soon as separation occurs locally. This happens before the abrupt pressure decrease, meaning that the vortex is sensed first by increasing fluctuations and then by suction increase. The comparative graphs point out that the extremum
precedes
for all configurations. This indicates, that the source of unsteadiness is located around the vortex core, under which high suction is present. Hence, instabilities in the shear layer are majorly responsible for the pressure fluctuations, as observed also in [
7,
8].
While each average pressure coefficient curve has one peak, the rms value has for each presented configuration two, sometimes several, peaks. As the angle of attack increases, a sharp local peak
is generally followed by a flat one that occurs at significantly higher angles of attack. The curve’s progression during increasing angle of attack is the effect of the vortex increase in strength and cross-section. The first peak of
is measured, while the sensor is situated at the inboard edge of the pressure footprint of the vortex. The rms values decrease, reaching a local minimum, while the suction still rises. A further vortex expansion with angle of attack leads to slow
decrease and a
increase. The curves of
Figure 14 are qualitatively similar downstream. The incipient separation moves upstream during
increase. The mean pressure increases downstream and the pressure fluctuations decrease, as breakdown moves farther towards the apex. For all configurations, stall is detected by a kink in
curves that occurs at similar angles of attack for all chordwise positions. The vortex collapse, occurring simultaneously above all measured chord sections, is expected under these freestream conditions.
As shown in the comparative graphs (
Figure 14a–d), the roughness size has a noticeable effect on the vortex development. Underneath the unperturbed vortex (
Figure 14a), the rms pressure coefficient has a similar distribution with angle of attack in all shown chord sections. The first peak is relatively sharp and the second one forms a plateau in the range of
. The second graph (
Figure 14b) shows the trip-dot configuration. For this case, separation is delayed the most, according to the linear curve region. Once separation occurs, pressure fluctuations rise rapidly with
and reach the highest amplitudes compared to other configurations in all four sections. This suggests, that the highest vortex system unsteadiness is generated whit maximum vortex separation delay. In addition, the
peak is sharp for the first two chordwise positions, while downstream the peak is barely noticeable. For the overtripped cases (
Figure 14c,d), the fluctuations rise less abruptly and reach lower maximum values than for lower disturbance heights. For
(
Figure 14d), the first rms peak has the lowest value compared to other cases. The typical rms plateau, described above, does not change in value when the normalized disturbance height is increased from
to
. Hence, increased damping of surface pressure fluctuations is associated with leading-edge roughness size until saturation conditions are reached.
3.6. Spectral Analysis
In order to detect dominant frequencies that can be attributed to flow instabilities, the power spectral densities
as a function of reduced frequency are presented in
Figure 15 on a double logarithmic scale. The
is computed by discrete Fourrier transformation of a complete measured signal of 80,000 samples without using a window function. In addition, band-averaging over 1024 bands is applied in the frequency domain. The reduced frequency
k is the frequency
f normalized by the mean aerodynamic chord length
and the freestream velocity
:
The displayed results were measured on the upper surface of the clean diamond wing model at , but represent well the qualitative progression of the power spectra for all investigated cases with respect to and sensor location ( and ).
Figure 15a includes the power spectrum of
measured at
and
, for angles of attack ranging within
. It represents the squared and normalized Fourier-transformed time signals of
Figure 13a. At low angles of attack, the flow around the diamond wing is mainly attached and steady. The power spectrum has low values with no significant peak. While increasing the angle of attack, the vortex grows and moves upstream, approaching the sensor location. In the range of
, the pressure fluctuations are rapidly amplified with increasing
, still with no dominant peak in the spectral domain. At
, a first dominant broadband frequency peak is detected. In contrast, vortex breakdown above slender delta wings typically exhibits one narrowband peak associated with the helical mode instability [
24,
25]. The breakdown of non-slender wings is more random, hence, flow structures of different scales are present. In this regard, the peak detection is more difficult. With further increase in angle of attack, the peak shifts to lower frequencies and a second broad band peak is measured at higher frequencies (
). Prior to stall (
), the higher frequency peak is barely measurable. At stall and post-stall the dominant peak shifts to lower frequencies and flattens until only anisotropic low energy turbulence is detected over the stalled wing.
As discussed previously, the induced pressure fluctuations on the wing surface depend mainly on the relative position between the sensor and the vortex breakdown. As the angle of attack increases, the vortex breakdown location shifts upstream and the breakdown flow expands, in consistency with the dominant frequency reduction. At a fixed angle of attack of
, the signals of the four most aft positioned pressure transducers are transformed into the spectral domain and the resulting
with respect to
k are compared in
Figure 15b. In this particular case, the breakdown region is dominated by broadband peaks. Two distinct peaks are detected at three sensor locations. At
and
, however, a plateau in a relative high frequency range of
3–6 is detected instead of two distinctive peaks. Consequently, the inboard breakdown flow region is dominated by two flow instabilities: shear-layer instability and vortex breakdown. In the most aft chord section,
, the
levels increase at a more inboard location. At the same time, both dominant peaks get farther apart in the frequency space: the first dominant frequency decreases, while the second increases slightly.
The approximate values of the dominant reduced frequency
are plotted in
Figure 16 as function of angle of attack. The first detected peak
is designated with full symbols, while empty symbols represent the higher dominant reduced frequency
. In addition, three roughness heights are compared at six sensor locations. The dashed lines represent the reduced frequencies of the helical mode instability, as deduced empirically in [
25]:
The dimensionless helical mode frequency
is dependent on the chordwise position
x, angle of attack
and leading-edge sweep angle
, the latter being constant. As described above, the pressure fluctuations rise rapidly with the angle of attack and uniformly in the investigated spectrum. Depending on the configuration, first peaks are detected by the most aft, outboard sensor (
,
) at
. The dominant reduced frequencies decrease downstream, suggesting increasing wavelength with the vortex cross section. The increase in
leads as well to decreasing dominant frequencies, as breakdown shifts upstream. The presence of two dominant peaks suggests that two distinct instabilities are present downstream of breakdown. The second dominant reduced frequency decreases at a higher rate with increasing
. The graphs show that both dominant frequencies converge with increasing angle of attack, until only one peak is detected. The shear layer instabilities and fluctuations of the stationary discrete vortices have been identified as one important source of breakdown and unsteadiness for non-slender delta wings [
8,
9]. However, these investigations did not identify two spectral peaks. At sufficiently high angles of attack, the higher frequency instability dissipates or merges with the first instability that is detected up to
. The first spectral peak takes values close to the helical mode frequency range, as reported also in [
7]. However, the slope of the measured peaks
is generally steeper than that of the calculated ones
.
All three investigated configurations (natural, forced and overtripped boundary layer) have similar values in the
-
-space. This indicates that the disturbances induced at the leading-edge separation does not affect the vortex system unsteadiness in the breakdown stage. The roughness height has a greater effect on the vortex separation onset location and the amplitudes of pressure fluctuations (as discussed above). However, distinct features can be extracted by comparing the dominant peaks of the configurations. The unsteady surface pressure has highest dominant frequencies for the fully turbulent case (blue triangles), especially in the outboard region. This is the effect of delayed vortex separation and a more concentrated, farther outboard vortex. Towards high incidences, the dominant frequencies for different configurations converge. The primary vortex of the natural and overtripped case is situated farther inboard, therefore, the sensors located at 0.65 relative local span detect dominant frequencies over a wider
-range (compare left graphs with right graphs in
Figure 16).
The unsteady pressure coefficients investigated in the spectral domain for a considerable parameter space reveals the unsteady character of the flow field in the post-breakdown region. The investigations identify the presence of two dominant broadband frequency peaks associated with two instabilities: shear-layer and breakdown instability. The vortex high-incidence dynamics is little affected by the leading-edge roughness height, which affects predominantly the separation onset location.