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Keywords = unsteady thin-wing theory

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19 pages, 3835 KB  
Article
Study on Noise Model of an Automotive Axial Fan Based on Aerodynamic Load Force
by Yinhui Zhong, Yinong Li and Jun Li
Appl. Sci. 2022, 12(14), 7326; https://doi.org/10.3390/app12147326 - 21 Jul 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2396
Abstract
Due to the fact that the noise caused by axial fan blades of vehicles is large, which seriously affects ride comfort, and there is no effective mathematical model to quantitatively study the contribution of the various parameters of the blades to the noise, [...] Read more.
Due to the fact that the noise caused by axial fan blades of vehicles is large, which seriously affects ride comfort, and there is no effective mathematical model to quantitatively study the contribution of the various parameters of the blades to the noise, a new method for calculating the load force of the blades is proposed. This method obtains the constant load force of the blade according to the blade element momentum theory and the characteristics of the blade structure of the axial fan for a vehicle. At the same time, this method obtains the non-constant load force of the blade by combining the non-constant thin-wing theory and experimental data and then vectors the constant load force and the non-constant load force to obtain the total load force of the blade to build a mathematical model of the relationship between the noise of the fan and the parameters of the blade. According to the model, the total sound pressure level of a fan is calculated numerically and further compared with the FLUENT software simulation and experimental results. The results show that the error of the total sound pressure level calculated by the numerical value is within 3 dB(A). This method provides an important basis for the study of a high-accuracy noise mathematical model and the optimization of blade parameters of low Mach-number fans. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mechanical Engineering)
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27 pages, 1240 KB  
Article
On the Incipient Indicial Lift of Thin Wings in Subsonic Flow: Acoustic Wave Theory with Unsteady Three-Dimensional Effects
by Marco Berci
Acoustics 2022, 4(1), 26-52; https://doi.org/10.3390/acoustics4010003 - 18 Jan 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3640
Abstract
Enhanced approximate expressions for the incipient indicial lift of thin wings in subsonic potential flow are presented in this study, featuring explicit analytical corrections for the unsteady downwash. Lifting-line and acoustic-wave theories form the basis of the method, within an effective synthesis of [...] Read more.
Enhanced approximate expressions for the incipient indicial lift of thin wings in subsonic potential flow are presented in this study, featuring explicit analytical corrections for the unsteady downwash. Lifting-line and acoustic-wave theories form the basis of the method, within an effective synthesis of the governing physics, which grants a consistent generalised framework and unifies previous works. The unsteady flow perturbation consists of a step-change in angle of attack or a vertical sharp-edged gust. The proposed model is successfully evaluated against numerical results in the literature for the initial airload development of elliptical and rectangular wings with a symmetric aerofoil, considering several aspect ratios and Mach numbers. While nonlinear downwash and compressibility terms demonstrate marginal (especially for the case of a travelling gust), both linear and nonlinear geometrical effects from a significant taper ratio, sweep angle or curved leading-edge are found to be more important than linear downwash corrections (which are crucial for the circulation growth at later times instead, along with linear compressibility corrections). The present formulae may then be used as a rigorous reduced-order model for validating higher-fidelity tools and complex simulations in industrial practice, as well as for estimating parametric sensitivities of unsteady aerodynamic loads within the preliminary design of aircraft wings in the subsonic regime. Full article
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26 pages, 4213 KB  
Article
On Aerodynamic Models for Flutter Analysis: A Systematic Overview and Comparative Assessment
by Marco Berci
Appl. Mech. 2021, 2(3), 516-541; https://doi.org/10.3390/applmech2030029 - 29 Jul 2021
Cited by 15 | Viewed by 6856 | Correction
Abstract
This work reviews different analytical formulations for the time-dependent aerodynamic load of a thin aerofoil and clarifies numerical flutter results available in the literature for the typical section of a flexible wing; inviscid, two-dimensional, incompressible, potential flow is considered in all test cases. [...] Read more.
This work reviews different analytical formulations for the time-dependent aerodynamic load of a thin aerofoil and clarifies numerical flutter results available in the literature for the typical section of a flexible wing; inviscid, two-dimensional, incompressible, potential flow is considered in all test cases. The latter are investigated using the exact theory for small airflow perturbations, which involves both circulatory and non-circulatory effects of different nature, complemented by the p-k flutter analysis. Starting from unsteady aerodynamics and ending with steady aerodynamics, quasi-unsteady and quasi-steady aerodynamic models are systematically derived by successive simplifications within a unified approach. The influence of the aerodynamic approximations on the aeroelastic stability boundary is then rigorously assessed from both physical and mathematical perspectives. All aerodynamic models are critically discussed and compared in the light of the numerical results as well, within a comprehensive theoretical framework in practice. In all cases, results accuracy depends on the aero-structural arrangement of the flexible wing; however, simplified unsteady and simplified quasi-unsteady aerodynamic approximations are suggested for robust flutter analysis whenever the wing’s elastic axis lies ahead of the aerofoil’s control point. Full article
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26 pages, 11509 KB  
Article
Identification of Fixed-Wing Micro Aerial Vehicle Aerodynamic Derivatives from Dynamic Water Tunnel Tests
by Krzysztof Sibilski, Mirosław Nowakowski, Dariusz Rykaczewski, Paweł Szczepaniak, Andrzej Żyluk, Anna Sibilska-Mroziewicz, Michał Garbowski and Wiesław Wróblewski
Aerospace 2020, 7(8), 116; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace7080116 - 13 Aug 2020
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 5240
Abstract
A micro air vehicle (MAV) is a class of miniature unmanned aerial vehicles that has a size restriction and may be autonomous. Fixed-wing MAVs are very attractive for outdoor surveillance missions since they generally offer better payload and endurance capabilities than rotorcraft or [...] Read more.
A micro air vehicle (MAV) is a class of miniature unmanned aerial vehicles that has a size restriction and may be autonomous. Fixed-wing MAVs are very attractive for outdoor surveillance missions since they generally offer better payload and endurance capabilities than rotorcraft or flapping-wing vehicles of equal size. This research paper describes the methodology applying indicial function theory and artificial neural networks for identification of aerodynamic derivatives for fixed-wing MAV. The formulation herein proposed extends well- known aerodynamic theories, which are limited to thin aerofoils in incompressible flow, to strake wing planforms. Using results from dynamic water tunnel tests and indicial functions approach allowed to identify MAV aerodynamic derivatives. The experiments were conducted in a water tunnel in the course of dynamic tests of periodic oscillatory motion. The tests program range was set at high angles of attack and a wide scope of reduced frequencies of angular movements. Due to a built-in propeller, the model’s structure test program was repeated for a turned-on propelled drive system. As a result of these studies, unsteady aerodynamics characteristics and aerodynamic derivatives of the micro-aircraft were identified as functions of state parameters. At the Warsaw University of Technology and the Air Force Institute of Technology, a “Bee” fixed wings micro aerial vehicle with an innovative strake-wing outline and a propeller placed in the wing gap was worked. This article is devoted to the problems of identification of aerodynamic derivatives of this micro-aircraft. The result of this research was the identification of the aerodynamic derivatives of the fixed wing MAV “Bee” as non-linear functions of the angle of attack, and reduced frequency. The identification was carried out using the indicial function approach. Full article
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24 pages, 2133 KB  
Article
Unsteady Lifting Line Theory Using the Wagner Function for the Aerodynamic and Aeroelastic Modeling of 3D Wings
by Johan Boutet and Grigorios Dimitriadis
Aerospace 2018, 5(3), 92; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace5030092 - 1 Sep 2018
Cited by 36 | Viewed by 13567
Abstract
A method is presented to model the incompressible, attached, unsteady lift and pitching moment acting on a thin three-dimensional wing in the time domain. The model is based on the combination of Wagner theory and lifting line theory through the unsteady Kutta–Joukowski theorem. [...] Read more.
A method is presented to model the incompressible, attached, unsteady lift and pitching moment acting on a thin three-dimensional wing in the time domain. The model is based on the combination of Wagner theory and lifting line theory through the unsteady Kutta–Joukowski theorem. The results are a set of closed-form linear ordinary differential equations that can be solved analytically or using a Runge–Kutta–Fehlberg algorithm. The method is validated against numerical predictions from an unsteady vortex lattice method for rectangular and tapered wings undergoing step or oscillatory changes in plunge or pitch. Further validation is demonstrated on an aeroelastic test case of a rigid rectangular finite wing with pitch and plunge degrees of freedom. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Aeroelasticity)
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23 pages, 4397 KB  
Article
A Hybrid Reduced-Order Model for the Aeroelastic Analysis of Flexible Subsonic Wings—A Parametric Assessment
by Marco Berci and Rauno Cavallaro
Aerospace 2018, 5(3), 76; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace5030076 - 17 Jul 2018
Cited by 19 | Viewed by 7823
Abstract
A hybrid reduced-order model for the aeroelastic analysis of flexible subsonic wings with arbitrary planform is presented within a generalised quasi-analytical formulation, where a slender beam is considered as the linear structural dynamics model. A modified strip theory is proposed for modelling the [...] Read more.
A hybrid reduced-order model for the aeroelastic analysis of flexible subsonic wings with arbitrary planform is presented within a generalised quasi-analytical formulation, where a slender beam is considered as the linear structural dynamics model. A modified strip theory is proposed for modelling the unsteady aerodynamics of the wing in incompressible flow, where thin aerofoil theory is corrected by a higher-fidelity model in order to account for three-dimensional effects on both distribution and deficiency of the sectional air load. Given a unit angle of attack, approximate expressions for the lift decay and build-up are then adopted within a linear framework, where the two effects are separately calculated and later combined. Finally, a modal approach is employed to write the generalised equations of motion in state-space form. Numerical results were obtained and critically discussed for the aeroelastic stability analysis of a uniform rectangular wing, with respect to the relevant aerodynamic and structural parameters. The proposed hybrid model provides sound theoretical insights and is well suited as an efficient parametric reduced-order aeroelastic tool for the preliminary multidisciplinary design and optimisation of flexible wings in the subsonic regime. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Computational Aerodynamic Modeling of Aerospace Vehicles)
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