Study of ice accretion on icing wind tunnel components
Author(s) -
James E. Newton,
W. A. Olsen
Publication year - 1986
Publication title -
29th aerospace sciences meeting
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.1986-290
Subject(s) - icing , accretion (finance) , wind tunnel , meteorology , environmental science , geology , aerospace engineering , engineering , physics , astrophysics
In a closed loop icing wind tunnel the icing cloud is simulated by introducing tiny water droplets through an array of nozzles upstream of the test section. This cloud will form ice on all tunnel components (e.g., turning vanes, inlet guide vanes, fan blades, and the heat exchanger) as the cloud flows around the tunnel. These components must have the capacity to handle their icing loads without causing significant tunnel performance degradation during the course of an evening's run. To aid in the design of these components for the proposed Altitude Wind Tunnel (AWT) at NASA Lewis Research Center the existing Icing Research Tunnel (IRT) is used to measure icing characteristics of the IRT's components. The results from the IRT are scaled to the AWT to account for the AWT's larger components and higher velocities. The results show that from 90 to 45 percent of the total spray cloud froze out on the heat exchanger. Furthermore, the first set of turning vanes downstream of the test section, the FOD screen and the fan blades show significant ice formation. The scaling shows that the same results would occur in the AWT.
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