Development of an aeroelastic methodology for surface morphing rotors

A Computational Fluid Dynamics/Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD/CSD) coupling interface was developed to obtain aeroelastic solutions of a morphing rotor. The methodology was implemented in Fully Unstructured Navier-Stokes (FUN3D) solver, which communicates aerodynamic forces on the blade surface t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cook, James Richard
Other Authors: Smith, Marilyn J.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2014
Subjects:
CFD
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/51807
id ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-51807
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-518072014-09-10T03:37:32ZDevelopment of an aeroelastic methodology for surface morphing rotorsCook, James RichardAeroelasticityTest facilityRecirculationTurbulence modelHrlesRotorcraftRotorCFD/CSDCouplingCFDCamberActuationMorphingRotorsAeroelasticityStructural dynamicsComputational fluid dynamicsA Computational Fluid Dynamics/Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD/CSD) coupling interface was developed to obtain aeroelastic solutions of a morphing rotor. The methodology was implemented in Fully Unstructured Navier-Stokes (FUN3D) solver, which communicates aerodynamic forces on the blade surface to University of Michigan’s Nonlinear Active Beam Solver (UM/NLABS) and then imports structural deflections of the blade surface during each time step. Development of this methodology adds the capability to model elastic rotors with flexible airfoils. The method was validated through an aerodynamic work analysis, comparison of sectional blade loads and deflections with experimental data, and two-dimensional stability analyses for pitch/plunge flutter and camber flutter. Computational simulations were performed for a rotor in forward flight with the CFD/CSD solver and with a comprehensive CSD solver using finite-state (F-S) aerodynamics, and results were compared. Prescribed three-per-revolution camber deflections were then applied, and solutions of the CFD/CSD and comprehensive CSD computations indicated that three-per-revolution camber actuation has the potential to minimize hub forces and moments with deflections as small as 0.25%c. In anticipation of active rotor experiments inside enclosed facilities, the capability of CFD for accurately simulating flow inside enclosed volumes was examined. It was determined that URANS models are not suitable for rotor simulations in an enclosed facility, and components that are a distance of two to three rotor radii from the hub were also observed to have a large influence on recirculation and performance.Georgia Institute of TechnologySmith, Marilyn J.2014-05-22T15:23:45Z2014-05-22T15:23:45Z2014-052014-01-10May 20142014-05-22T15:23:45ZDissertationapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/51807en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Aeroelasticity
Test facility
Recirculation
Turbulence model
Hrles
Rotorcraft
Rotor
CFD/CSD
Coupling
CFD
Camber
Actuation
Morphing
Rotors
Aeroelasticity
Structural dynamics
Computational fluid dynamics
spellingShingle Aeroelasticity
Test facility
Recirculation
Turbulence model
Hrles
Rotorcraft
Rotor
CFD/CSD
Coupling
CFD
Camber
Actuation
Morphing
Rotors
Aeroelasticity
Structural dynamics
Computational fluid dynamics
Cook, James Richard
Development of an aeroelastic methodology for surface morphing rotors
description A Computational Fluid Dynamics/Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD/CSD) coupling interface was developed to obtain aeroelastic solutions of a morphing rotor. The methodology was implemented in Fully Unstructured Navier-Stokes (FUN3D) solver, which communicates aerodynamic forces on the blade surface to University of Michigan’s Nonlinear Active Beam Solver (UM/NLABS) and then imports structural deflections of the blade surface during each time step. Development of this methodology adds the capability to model elastic rotors with flexible airfoils. The method was validated through an aerodynamic work analysis, comparison of sectional blade loads and deflections with experimental data, and two-dimensional stability analyses for pitch/plunge flutter and camber flutter. Computational simulations were performed for a rotor in forward flight with the CFD/CSD solver and with a comprehensive CSD solver using finite-state (F-S) aerodynamics, and results were compared. Prescribed three-per-revolution camber deflections were then applied, and solutions of the CFD/CSD and comprehensive CSD computations indicated that three-per-revolution camber actuation has the potential to minimize hub forces and moments with deflections as small as 0.25%c. In anticipation of active rotor experiments inside enclosed facilities, the capability of CFD for accurately simulating flow inside enclosed volumes was examined. It was determined that URANS models are not suitable for rotor simulations in an enclosed facility, and components that are a distance of two to three rotor radii from the hub were also observed to have a large influence on recirculation and performance.
author2 Smith, Marilyn J.
author_facet Smith, Marilyn J.
Cook, James Richard
author Cook, James Richard
author_sort Cook, James Richard
title Development of an aeroelastic methodology for surface morphing rotors
title_short Development of an aeroelastic methodology for surface morphing rotors
title_full Development of an aeroelastic methodology for surface morphing rotors
title_fullStr Development of an aeroelastic methodology for surface morphing rotors
title_full_unstemmed Development of an aeroelastic methodology for surface morphing rotors
title_sort development of an aeroelastic methodology for surface morphing rotors
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/51807
work_keys_str_mv AT cookjamesrichard developmentofanaeroelasticmethodologyforsurfacemorphingrotors
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