Investigation of Rotor–Airframe Interaction Noise Associated with Small-Scale Rotary-Wing Unmanned Aircraft Systems
Author(s) -
Nikolas S. Zawodny,
Douglas D. Boyd
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of the american helicopter society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.442
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 2161-6027
pISSN - 0002-8711
DOI - 10.4050/jahs.65.012007
Subject(s) - airframe , rotor (electric) , noise (video) , helicopter rotor , aerospace engineering , airfoil , acoustics , aeroacoustics , aircraft noise , engineering , computer science , physics , mechanical engineering , sound pressure , noise reduction , artificial intelligence , image (mathematics)
In this study, hover acoustic measurements are taken on isolated rotor-airframe configurations representative of smallscale, rotary-wing unmanned aircraft systems (UAS). Each rotor-airframe configuration consists of two fixed-pitch blades powered by a brushless motor, with a simplified airframe geometry intended to represent a generic multicopter arm. In addition to acoustic measurements, CFD-based aeroacoustic predictions are implemented on a subset of the experimentally tested rotor-airframe configurations in an effort to better understand the noise content of the rotor-airframe systems. Favorable agreements are obtained between acoustic measurements and predictions, based on both timeand frequency-domain post-processing techniques. Results indicate that close proximity of airframe surfaces result in the generation of considerable tonal acoustic content in the form of harmonics of the rotor blade passage frequency (BPF). Analysis of the acoustic prediction data shows that the presence of the airframe surfaces can generate noise levels either comparable to or greater than the rotor blade surfaces under certain rotor tip clearance conditions. Analysis of the on-surface Ffowcs Williams and Hawkings (FW-H) source terms provide insight as to the predicted physical noise-generating mechanisms on the rotor and airframe surfaces.
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