Inward-Turning Streamline-Traced Inlet Design Method for Low-Boom, Low-Drag Applications
Author(s) -
Samuel E. Otto,
Charles Trefny,
John W. Slater
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of propulsion and power
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.913
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 1533-3876
pISSN - 0748-4658
DOI - 10.2514/1.b36028
Subject(s) - nacelle , inlet , freestream , computational fluid dynamics , mach number , drag , aerospace engineering , supersonic speed , aerodynamics , angle of attack , flow separation , conical surface , engineering , mechanics , mechanical engineering , boundary layer , reynolds number , physics , turbulence , turbine
A new design method for inward-turning, streamline-traced inlets is presented. Resulting designs are intended for low supersonic, low-drag, low-boom applications such as that required for NASA’s proposed low-boom flight demonstration aircraft. A critical feature of these designs is the internal cowl lip angle that allows for little or no flow turning on the outer nacelle. Present methods using conical-flow “Busemann” parent flowfields have simply truncated, or otherwise modified the stream-traced contours to include this internal cowl angle. Such modifications disrupt the parent flowfield, reducing inlet performance and flow uniformity. The method presented herein merges a conical flowfield that includes a leading shock with a truncated Busemann flowfield in a manner that minimizes unwanted interactions. A leading internal cowl angle is now inherent in the parent flowfield, and inlet contours traced from this flowfield retain its high performance and good flow uniformity. CFD analysis of a candidate inlet design is presented that verifies the design technique, and reveals a “starting” issue with the basic geometry. A minor modification to the cowl lip region is shown to eliminate this phenomenon, thereby allowing starting and smooth transition to sub-critical operation as back-pressure is increased. An inlet critical-point total pressure recovery of 96% is achieved based on CFD results for a Mach 1.7 freestream design. Correction for boundary-layer displacement thickness, and sizing for a given engine airflow requirement are also discussed.
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