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Boundary Condition Study for the Juncture Flow Experiment in the NASA Langley 14x22-Foot Subsonic Wind Tunnel
Author(s) -
Christopher L. Rumsey,
Jan-Reneé Carlson,
Judith Han,
Luther N. Jenkins,
Scott M. Bartram,
Thomas H. Pulliam,
Henry Lee
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
46th aiaa fluid dynamics conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2017-4126
Subject(s) - wind tunnel , juncture , computational fluid dynamics , marine engineering , inflow , flow (mathematics) , aerospace engineering , parametric statistics , hypersonic wind tunnel , engineering , boundary value problem , meteorology , structural engineering , mechanics , physics , mathematics , statistics , quantum mechanics
Because future wind tunnel tests associated with the NASA Juncture Flow project are being designed for the purpose of CFD validation, considerable effort is going into the characterization of the wind tunnel boundary conditions, particularly at inflow. This is important not only because wind tunnel flowfield nonuniformities can play a role in integrated testing uncertainties, but also because the better the boundary conditions are known, the better CFD can accurately represent the experiment. This paper describes recent investigative wind tunnel tests involving two methods to measure and characterize the oncoming flow in the NASA Langley 14by 22-Foot Subsonic Tunnel. The features of each method, as well as some of their pros and cons, are highlighted. Boundary conditions and modeling tactics currently used by CFD for empty-tunnel simulations are also described, and some results using three different CFD codes are shown. Preliminary CFD parametric studies associated with the Juncture Flow model are summarized, to determine sensitivities of the flow near the wing-body juncture region of the model to a variety of modeling decisions.

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