A Wind Tunnel Study of Icing Effects on a Business Jet Airfoil
Author(s) -
Harold E. Addy,
Andy P. Broeren,
Joseph Zoeckler,
Sam Lee
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
41st aerospace sciences meeting and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2003-727
Subject(s) - airfoil , wind tunnel , icing , jet (fluid) , aerospace engineering , aerodynamics , marine engineering , environmental science , engineering , meteorology , physics
Aerodynamic wind tunnel tests were conducted to study the effects of various ice accretions on the aerodynamic performance of a 36-inch chord, two-dimensional business jet airfoil. Eight different ice shape configurations were tested. Four were castings made from molds of ice shapes accreted in an icing wind tunnel. Two were made using computationally smoothed tracings of two of the ice shapes accreted in the icing tunnel. These smoothed profiles were then extended in the spanwise direction to form a twodimensional ice shape. The final two configurations were formed by applying grit to the smoothed ice shapes. The ice shapes resulted in as much as 48% reduction in maximum lift coefficient from that of the clean airfoil. Large increases in drag and changes in pitching moment were also observed. The castings and their corresponding smoothed counterparts yielded similar results. Little change in performance was observed with the addition of grit to the smoothed ice shapes. Changes in the Reynolds number (from 3×10 to 10.5×10) and Mach number (from 0.12 to 0.28) did not significantly affect the iced-airfoil performance coefficients.
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