Experimental Evaluation of an Internally Passively Pressurized Circulation Control Propeller
Author(s) -
Jonathan Kweder,
Cale Zeune,
Jon Geiger,
Andrew D. Lowery,
James E. Smith
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of aerodynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2356-7139
pISSN - 2314-6206
DOI - 10.1155/2014/834132
Subject(s) - propeller , trailing edge , takeoff , advance ratio , marine engineering , lift (data mining) , propulsor , drag , airfoil , takeoff and landing , wing , lift to drag ratio , leading edge , tearing , aerospace engineering , engineering , structural engineering , mechanical engineering , computer science , blade pitch , turbine , data mining
The purpose of circulation control for fixed wing aircrafts is to increase the lifting force when large lifting forces and/or slow speeds are required, such as at takeoff and landing. Wing flaps and slats are used on almost all fixed-wing aircraft. While effective in increasing lift, they do so with penalty of increasing drag, weight, and control complexity. The goal of this research was to find an alternative way of pumping pressurized air to the trailing edge slot on a UAV propeller. This design called for rerouting stagnation pressure from the frontal propeller area through the inside of the propeller blades to ejection slots on the trailing edge. This allows for the forward velocity of the aircraft to drive the pressurization of the circulation control plenum passively, without additional hardware. For this study, a Clark-Y airfoil section propeller with an overall diameter of 0.609 meters was designed and tested. The comparison of the augmented to unaugmented propeller showed a 5.12 percent increase in efficiency, which is shown to act over the entire range of flight envelopes of the aircraft and is shown to be particularly beneficial at advance ratios above 0.30, normal operating conditions of propeller-driven UAVs.
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