Title: Fluid Mechanics Laboratory
1Active Control of Separation on a Wing with
Conformal Camber
The 39th Aerospace Sciences Meeting and
Exhibit American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics
- David Munday and Jamey Jacob
- Department of Mechanical Engineering
- University of Kentucky
- 8 January 2001
2Outline
- Motivation
- Flow Control
- Adaptive Airfoils
- Adaptive Wing Model
- Experimental results
- Conclusions
- Further work
3Motivation
- µAVs
- Re 104 - 105
- UAVs
- Re 105 - 106
- High Altitude
- Other
- atmospheres (Mars)
4Airfoil Performance
- L/D reduced by more than an order of magnitude as
Re falls through 105
Figure from McMasters and Henderson
5Laminar Separation Bubble
- Adverse Pressure gradient on a laminar flow
causes separation - Transition occurs. Fluid is entrained and
turbulent flow re-attaches
Figure from Lissaman
6Flow Control
- Any method which can modify the flow
- Can be passive or active
- Active flow control can respond to changes in
conditions - Requires energy input
- Active flow control is not a mature technology
- Shows promise
7Active Flow Control
- Constant sucking or blowing
- Intermittent sucking and blowing (synthetic jets)
- Wygnanski, Glezer
- Suggests existence of sweet spots in frequency
range - Mechanical momentum transfer
- Modi, V. J.
- Change of the shape of the wing (Adaptive
Airfoils)
8Adaptive Airfoils
- Can change shape to adapt to flow
- Simple examples Flaps, Slats, Droops
- Move slowly, quasi-static
- Change shape parameter (usually camber) to adapt
to differing flight regimes - Rapid Actuation
- Can adapt to rapid changes in flow condition
- May produce the same sort of sweet spot
frequency response as synthetic jets
9Some Adaptive Wing Research
- DARPA smart wing
- torsion control of entire wing using internal
actuators - DDLE wing
- rapid change in leading edge radius using
mechanical actuator - micro Flaps - MITEs (Kroo et. al.)
- multiple miniature trailing edge flaps with fixed
displacement
10Piezoelectric Actuation
- Rapid actuation requires either large forces or
light actuators - Piezo-actuators are small and light
- They are a natural choice for µAV designs
11Previous Work
- Pinkerton and MosesA Feasibility Study To
Control Airfoil Shape Using THUNDER, NASA TM 4767
12Adaptive Wing Construction
- NACA 4415
- well measured, room for internal actuator
placement - Modular (allows variation in aspect ratio)
- Multiple independent actuators
- Flexible insulating layer and skin
13Adaptive Wing Construction
- Airfoil Profiles
- predicted prior to construction using given
actuator placement and full range of actuator
motion - actuator displacement increases maximum thickness
and moves point of maximum thickness aft
14Wing Construction
Base 4415
With Cutout
With mount-block
With Actuator
With spars
15Adaptive Wing Module
16Testing Overview
- Static model force measurements
- L/D enhancement using fixed actuator locations
- Static model PIV
- separation control using fixed actuator locations
- Dynamic model force measurements
- L/D enhancement using oscillating actuator motion
- Dynamic model Flow Visualization
- flow control using oscillating actuator motion
17Static Model Force Measurements
- Wind tunnel tests
- L/D declines as actuator displacement decreases
then increases as maximum displacement is reached
at high AoA
Corrected for Blockage as per Barlow, Rae and
Pope, 1999
18Static Model PIV
Separation
19Dynamic Model
- Oscillating upper surface
- scanning LDS at 1 inch/sec with 1 Hz oscillation
Plot of displacement -vs- time as a distance
transducer scans the model. Oscillations can be
seen. Units are mV -vs- seconds.
20Dynamic Model Force Measurements
- So far we have only tested at a Re of 25,000
- At this Re the forces are quite light
- They are lost in the noise
- We expect to have force measurements for higher
Re - Present model has protrusions on lower surface
where the skin attaches - Next generation model will have the attachment
hardware recessed
21Dynamic Model Flow Visualization
- Flow Visualization is by the smoke wire technique
- As described in Batill and Mueller (1981)
- A wire doped with oil is stretched across the
test section - The wire is heated by Joule heating and the oil
evaporates making smoke trails - Limited to low Re
- Limit due to requirement for laminar flow over
wire - Limited to a wire diameter based Red lt 50
22Dynamic Model Flow Visualization
a 0
Actuator Fixed
Actuation 15 Hz
23Dynamic Model Flow Visualization
a 9
Actuator Fixed
Actuation 45 Hz
24Conclusions
- Large static displacement of the actuator shows
some improvement in L/D - Oscillation of the actuator has a pronounced
effect on the size of the separated flow - The response to this oscillation does show a
sweet spot where separation is reduced
maximally - 15 Hz for 0
- 20 to 60 Hz for 9 with a maximum at 45 Hz
25Further Work
- Expand the range of Re
- Force measurements of Dynamic Mode
- effect on L/D
- PIV measurements of Dynamic Mode
- flow control
- Phase average PIV data
- Examine behavior with artificial turbulation
- Compare gains in performance with power required
26Questions?