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Flow control via synthetic jet actuationMiller, Adam Cole 17 February 2005 (has links)
An experimental investigation was undertaken to determine the ability of Synthetic Jet
Actuators to control the aerodynamic properties of a wing. The Synthetic Jet Actuator
(SJA) was placed at two separate positions on a wing comprised of a NACA0015 airfoil.
The first of the jet positions is located at 12% of the chord, hereby referred to as the
leading edge Synthetic Jet Actuator. The second exit position is located at 99% chord of
an airfoil and hereby is referred to as the trailing edge Synthetic Jet Actuator. The two
locations produced different benefits as the angle of attack of the wing was increased.
The leading edge Synthetic Jet Actuator delayed the onset of stall of an airfoil,
suppressing stall up to 25 degrees angle of attack. The control of the aerodynamic
characteristics was achieved by influencing the amount of the separated flowfield region.
The effects of the dynamic stall vortex were investigated with wind tunnel testing during
the pitching motion of an airfoil to determine how the flow reacts dynamically.
The trailing edge synthetic jet actuator was investigated as a form of low angle hingeless
control. The study investigated the effect of the jet momentum coefficient on the
ability of the synthetic jet to modify the lifting and pitching moment produced from the
wind tunnel model. The data indicates that, with the present implementation, the SJA-jet
flap generates moderate lift and moment coefficient increments that should be suitable
for hinge- less control. It was also shown that, for the current experimental setup and a
given jet momentum coefficient, continuous blowing is more effective than oscillatory
blowing/sucking. The data shows that combining the SJA with a Gurney flap does not
result in performance enhancement.
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Full-Scale Tilt Rotor Download ReductionBeck, Stephen January 2013 (has links)
A large-scale model of a tiltrotor wing and flap was built and tested to determine how the size and spacing of fluidic actuators for active flow control should be scaled up from laboratory size models to aircraft size. Flow control was provided by sweeping jet actuators mounted in the flap follower. Chordwise pressure data was collected through pressure taps located along the model centerline. The maximum flap deflection to which the flow could be attached with actuation was compared to previous experiments on a 10% 3D model. An ideal actuator spacing was found and the momentum coefficient was comparable between the various sized models. These results were used in the design of an industrial wind tunnel-scale model of a wing built for cruise and tiltrotor-like download testing. These tests have shown that actuators located in the flap follower are effective in both the hover and cruise phases of flight.
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Micro flow control using thermally responsive polymer solutionsBazargan, Vahid 11 1900 (has links)
Microfluidics refers to devices and methods for controlling and manipulating fluid flows at length scales less than a millimeter. Miniaturization of a laboratory to a small device, usually termed as lab-on-a-chip, is an advanced technology that integrates a microfluidic system including channels, mixers, reservoirs, pumps and valves on a micro scale chip and can manipulate very small sample volumes of fluids.
While several flow control concepts for microfluidic devices have been developed to date, here flow control concepts based on thermally responsive polymer solutions are presented. In particular, flow control concepts base on the thermally triggered reversible phase change of aqueous solutions of the polymer Pluronic will be discussed. Selective heating of small regions of microfluidic channels, which leads to localized gel formation in these channels and reversible channel blockage, will be used to control a membrane valve that controls flow in a separate channel. This new technology will allow generating inexpensive portable bioanalysis tools where microvalve actuation occurs simply through heaters at a constant pressure source without a need for large external pressure control systems as is currently the case. Furthermore, a concept for controlled cross-channel transport of particles and potentially cells is presented that relies on the continuous regeneration of a gel wall at the diffusive interface of two co-streaming fluids in a microfluidic channel.
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APPLICATION OF GENETIC ALGORITHMS AND CFD FOR FLOW CONTROL OPTIMIZATIONKotragouda, Narendra Beliganur 01 January 2007 (has links)
Active flow control is an area of heightened interest in the aerospace community. Previous research on flow control design processes heavily depended on trial and error and the designers knowledge and intuition. Such an approach cannot always meet the growing demands of higher design quality in less time. Successful application of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to this kind of control problem critically depends on an efficient searching algorithm for design optimization. CFD in conjunction with Genetic Algorithms (GA) potentially offers an efficient and robust optimization method and is a promising solution for current flow control designs. Current research has combined different existing GA techniques and motivation from the two-jet GA-CFD system previously developed at the University of Kentucky propose the applications of a real coded Continuous Genetic Algorithm (CGA) to optimize a four-jet and a synthetic jet control system on a NACA0012 airfoil. The control system is an array of jets on a NACA0012 airfoil and the critical parameters considered for optimization are the angle, the amplitude, the location, and the frequency of the jets. The design parameters of a steady four-jet and an unsteady synthetic jet system are proposed and optimized. The proposed algorithm is built on top of CFD code (GHOST), guiding the movement of jets along the airfoils upper surface. The near optimum control values are determined within the control parameter range. The current study of different Genetic Algorithms on airfoil flow control has been demonstrated to be a successful optimization application.
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Droplet Production and Transport in Microfluidic Networks with Pressure Driven Flow ControlGlawdel, Tomasz 10 July 2012 (has links)
Droplet based microfluidics is a developing technology with great potential towards improving large scale combinatorial studies that require high throughput and accurate metering of reagents. Each droplet can be thought of as a miniature microreactor where complex reactions can be performed on the micro-scale by mixing, splitting and combining droplets. This thesis investigates the operation and control of droplet microfluidic devices operating using constant pressure sources to pump fluids where feedback from the droplets influences the overall performance of the device. For this purpose, a model system consisting of a single T-junction droplet generator and a single network node is used to understand how pressure source control effects droplet generation and transport through microfluidic networks.
The first part of this thesis focuses on the generation of Newtonian liquid-liquid droplets from a microfluidic T-junction operating within the squeezing-to-transition regime with stable flow rates. An experimental study was performed to characterize the effects of geometry (height/width ratio, channel width ratio) and flow parameters (Capillary number, flow rate ratio, viscosity ratio) on the droplet size, spacing and rate of production. Three stages of droplet formation were identified (lag, filling and necking), including the newly defined lag stage that appears at the beginning of the formation cycle once the interface pulls back after a droplet detaches. Based on the experimental observations, a model was developed to describe the formation process which incorporates a detailed geometric description of the drop shape with a force balance in the filling stage and a control volume analysis of the necking stage. The model matches well with the experimental results as data falls within 10% of the predicted values.
Subsequently, the effect of surfactants on the formation process was investigated. Surfactant transport occurs on a timescale comparable to the production rate of droplets resulting in dynamic interfacial tension effects. This causes strong coupling between the mass transport of surfactants and the drop production process. Using the previously defined force balance, the apparent interfacial tension at the end of the filling stage was measured. The results show that there is a significant deviation from the equilibrium interfacial tension at normal operating conditions for the T-junction generators due to the rapid expansion of the interface. A model was developed to calculate the dynamic interfacial tension for pre and post micellar solutions, which was then incorporated into the overall model for droplet formation in T-junction generators.
Next, the behaviour of microfluidic droplet generators operating under pressure source control was investigated. Coupling between the changing interface and hydrodynamic resistance of the droplets and the flow rate of the two phases creates fluctuations in the output of the droplet generator. Oscillations were found to occur over the short term (one droplet formation cycle) and long term (many formation cycles). Two metrics were developed to quantify these oscillations. Short term oscillations were quantified by tracking droplet speed in the output channel and long term oscillation were quantified by measuring changes in droplet spacing. Analysis of experimental and numerical data shows that long term oscillations have a periodicity that matches the residence time of droplets in the system. A simple model is developed to determine the influence of Laplace pressure, droplet resistance, T-junction generator design and network architecture on the magnitude of these oscillations. From the model a set of design rules are developed to improve the overall operation of T-junction generators using pressure driven flow.
The final part of this thesis studies the transport of droplets through a single microchannel junction under various geometric and flow conditions applied to the two outlet channels. Droplets alter the hydrodynamic resistance of the channel they travel within which creates a feedback effect where the decision of preceding droplets influences the trajectory of subsequent droplets. Multifaceted behaviour occurs where sometimes the trajectory of droplets follows a repeatable pattern and other times it is chaotic. As part of this work, a discrete analytical model was developed that predicts droplet transport through the junction including transitions between filtering and sorting, bifurcation in the patterns, composition of the patterns, and an estimation of when patterns will disintegrate into chaos. The model was validated by comparing it to compact numerical simulations and microfluidic experiments with good agreement.The complex behaviour of a simple junction emphasizes the challenge that remains for more highly integrated droplet microfluidic networks operating with pressure driven flow.
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A parametric study of vane and air-jet vortex generatorsBray, Tim P. January 1998 (has links)
An experimental parametric sturdy of vane and air-jet vortex generators in a turbulent boundary layer has been carried out. Experiments were carried out in two facilities, one with a free-stream velocity of 20 m/s and a boundary layer thickness (6) of 41.5 mm, and one in a high speed facility at free-stream Mach numbers of between 0.45 and 0.75 and a boundary layer thickness of 20 mm. Cross-stream data were measured at a number of downstream locations using a miniature five-hole pressure probe, such that local cross-stream velocity vectors could be derived. Streamwise vorticity was calculated using the velocity vector data. In the low speed study, vortex generator parameters were as follows: ' Vane vortex generators: thin rectangular vanes with a vane aspect ratio of unity (2h/c = 1), free-stream velocity 20 m/s, incidence (cc = 10', 15', 18', 20'), height-to-boundary- layer- thickness-ratio (h/8 0.554,0.916,1.27,1.639), and strearnwise distance from the vortex generator (x/6 = 3.855,12.048,19.277,26.506). ' Air-jet vortex generators: circular jet nozzles, free-stream velocity = 20 m/s, jet nozzle pitch and skew angles (cc, P= 30', 45', 60'), hole diameter-to-boundary-layer-thickness-ratio (D/5 = 0.098,0.193,0.289), jet-to-free-stream-velocity ratio (VR = 0.7,1.0,1.3,1.6,2.0), and strearnwise distance from the vortex generator (x/8 = 3.855,12.048,19.277,26.506). In the high-speed study, the vortex generator parameters were as follows: Vane vortex generators: thin rectangular vanes with an aspect ratio of unity, incidence ((X 1505 20'), he i ght-to- boundary- I ayer-th i ckne s s-rati o (h/8 = 0.75), strearnwise distance from the vortex generator (x/6 = 8.755 16.25,23.75), and free-stream Mach numbers of 0.45,0.6 and 0.75. Air-jet vortex generators: jet pitch ((x = 30', 45'), jet skew angle (P = 30', 45', 60'), hole diameter-to-boundary-layer-thickness-ratio (D/8 = 0.15,0.3), j et-to- free- strearn-ve loc ity ratio (VR = 1.6), and strearnwise distance from the vortex generator (x/6 = 8.75,16.25,23.75, 31.25), and free-stream Mach numbers of 0.50,0.6 and 0.75. Streamwise vorticity data from the experiment was used to generate prediction techniques that would allow the vorticity profiles, downstream of vane or air-jet vortex generators, to be predicted. Both techniques are based on the approximation of the experimental cross-stream vorticity data to Gaussian distributions of vorticity through the vortex centre. The techniques, which are empirically derived, are simple equations that give the peak vorticity and vortex radius based on the vortex generator parameters. Use of these descriptors allows the assembly of the Gaussian vorticity equation. Both techniques are compared with the experimental data set and were seen to produce peak vorticity results to within 12% and 20% (for the vanes and air-jets respectively), 15% for the radius of the vortex, and 15% and 20% in vortex circulation (for the vanes and air-jets respectively). The two simple prediction techniques allow good prediction of the vortex structure at extremely low computational effort.
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Micro flow control using thermally responsive polymer solutionsBazargan, Vahid 11 1900 (has links)
Microfluidics refers to devices and methods for controlling and manipulating fluid flows at length scales less than a millimeter. Miniaturization of a laboratory to a small device, usually termed as lab-on-a-chip, is an advanced technology that integrates a microfluidic system including channels, mixers, reservoirs, pumps and valves on a micro scale chip and can manipulate very small sample volumes of fluids.
While several flow control concepts for microfluidic devices have been developed to date, here flow control concepts based on thermally responsive polymer solutions are presented. In particular, flow control concepts base on the thermally triggered reversible phase change of aqueous solutions of the polymer Pluronic will be discussed. Selective heating of small regions of microfluidic channels, which leads to localized gel formation in these channels and reversible channel blockage, will be used to control a membrane valve that controls flow in a separate channel. This new technology will allow generating inexpensive portable bioanalysis tools where microvalve actuation occurs simply through heaters at a constant pressure source without a need for large external pressure control systems as is currently the case. Furthermore, a concept for controlled cross-channel transport of particles and potentially cells is presented that relies on the continuous regeneration of a gel wall at the diffusive interface of two co-streaming fluids in a microfluidic channel. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Mechanical Engineering, Department of / Graduate
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Conceptual design for a laminar-flying-wing aircraftSaeed, Tariq Issam January 2012 (has links)
The laminar-flying-wing aircraft appears to be an attractive long-term prospect for reducing the environmental impact of commercial aviation. In assessing its potential, a relatively straightforward initial step is the conceptual design of a version with restricted sweep angle. Such a design is the topic of this thesis. In addition to boundary layer laminarisation (utilising distributed suction) and limited sweep, a standing-height passenger cabin and subcritical aerofoil flow are imposed as requirements. Subject to these constraints, this research aims to: provide insight into the parameters affecting practical laminar-flow-control suction power requirements; identify a viable basic design specification; and, on the basis of this, an assessment of the fuel efficiency through a detailed conceptual design study. It is shown that there is a minimum power requirement independent of the suction system design, associated with the stagnation pressure loss in the boundary layer. This requirement increases with aerofoil section thickness, but depends only weakly on Mach number and (for a thick, lightly-loaded laminar flying wing) lift coefficient. Deviation from the optimal suction distribution, due to a practical chamber-based architecture, is found to have very little effect on the overall suction coefficient. In the spanwise direction, through suitable choice of chamber depth, the pressure drop due to frictional and inertial effects may be rendered negligible. Finally, it is found that the pressure drop from the aerofoil surface to the pump collector ducts determines the power penalty; suggesting there is little benefit in trying to maintain an optimal suction distribution through increased subsurface-chamber complexity. For representative parameter values, the minimum power associated with boundary-layer losses alone contributes some 80% - 90% of the total power requirement. To identify the viable basic design specification, a high-level exploration of the laminar-flying-wing design space is performed, with an emphasis above all on aerodynamic efficiency. The characteristics of the design are assessed as a function of three parameters: thickness-to-chord ratio, wingspan, and unit Reynolds number. A feasible specification, with 20% thickness-to-chord, 80 m span and a unit Reynolds number of 8 x 10[superscript 6] m[superscript -1], is identified; it corresponds to a 187 tonne aircraft which cruises at Mach 0.67 and altitude 22,500 ft, with lift coefficient 0.14. The benefit of laminarisation is manifested in a high lift-to-drag ratio, but the wing loading is low, and the structural efficiency and gust response are thus likely to be relatively poor. On the basis of this specification, a detailed conceptual design is undertaken. A 220-passenger laminar-flying-wing concept, propelled by three turboprop engines, with a cruise range of 9000 km is developed. The estimated fuel burn is 13.9 g/pax.km. For comparison, a conventional aircraft, propelled by four turboprop engines, with a high-mounted, unswept, wing is designed for the same mission specification and propulsion characteristics, and is shown to have a fuel burn of 15.0 g/pax.km. Despite significant aerodynamic efficiency gains, the fuel burn of the laminar flying wing is only marginally better as it suffers from a poor cruise engine efficiency, due to extreme differences between takeoff and cruising requirements, and is much heavier. The laminar flying wing proposed in this thesis falls short of the performance improvements expected of the concept, and is not worth the development effort. It is therefore proposed that research efforts either be focussed on improving the engine efficiency, or switching to a low aspect ratio, high sweep, design configuration.
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Flow control using energy deposition at Mach 5Yang, Leichao January 2012 (has links)
Flow control has always been an intense research subject with the pursuit of favourable control effects like drag reduction, transition delay, and separation prevention. In practice, these flow control effects are achieved using mechanical actuators such as deflectors, vortex generators, transverse jets and so on. However, such mechanical actuators may face the drag penalty and limitation of actuation response time. In recent years, energy deposition has been suggested as a novel flow control technique in high-speed flow with preferable characteristics like non-intrusive, easy arrangement and high actuation frequency. The motivation of this work is to experimentally explore the flow behaviour after the certain amount of energy is deposited in Mach 5 flow. The energy deposition is implemented using a thermal bump (surface energy deposition) and laser beam focusing (volumetric energy deposition).This work starts with the development of a measurement technique of luminescent paint for the present challenging hypersonic testing environment, which is used for the further energy deposition experiment. The successes of the luminescent paint development is demonstrated both on two-dimensional and axisymmetric models. The luminescent paint shows high spatial resolution and the accuracy comparing to the pressure transducer reading. The surface energy deposition is performed using an embedded heating element (thermal bump) on a flat plate. Qualitative and quantitative measurement techniques are utilised to study the modification to the flow structure and the alteration to the distribution of pressure and heat transfer rate after thermal bump is activated. The results reveal the appearance of induced shock wave and suspicious vortices traces due to the activated thermal bump as reported in other literatures. Re-distribution of surface pressure and heat transfer rate are also found.For the volumetric energy deposition, the laser beam is firstly focused in quiescent air in order to understand the induced flow pattern and the impingement to a solid plate. High-speed schlieren photography is utilised to provide an insight to the dynamic evolution of the induced shock wave propagation and plasma kernel development after laser-induced air breakdown. Then, the laser energy deposition is conducted over a flat plate with the presence of Mach 5 flow. The outward motion of the induced shock wave significantly distorts the boundary layer and changes the surface pressure distribution. The results show the different pattern of boundary distortion when laser beam energy is deposited at different positions downstream of the leading edge of flat plate. The entire induced flow pattern is similar to those induced by a pulsed micro-jet. In spite of the laser pulse width of 4 ns, the entire dynamic process lasts about 100 μs.
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Passive Scalar Measurements In Actively Excited Free Shear FlowsMarques, Steven Joseph Jr. 17 August 1998 (has links)
The objectives of this study were to implement a system to measure mixing in nonreacting flows and to study the mass transfer characteristics of two actively excited turbulent jets. This thesis describes the acquisition and analysis of phase-locked concentration field data using planar Mie scattering from smoke particles and planar laser-induced fluorescence of acetone. Both techniques were shown to be effective in providing information for the actively excited nozzles. However, the laser-induced fluorescence technique was superior for revealing detail in the flowfield structure.
Spatial mode control techniques were applied to a triangular nozzle with vibrating actuators as the three sides and a swirl nozzle with pulsating tangential air jets. The effect of the different spatial modes on jet column development and the far fields of both nozzles is presented. Two- and three-dimensional iso-intensity contours, showing the relative intensity of light scattered by the nozzle fluid marker, were generated to show the flow structure. The areas inside the iso-intensity contours in the far field were also measured to determine relative effectiveness of nozzle fluid transport.
Large scale structures were visible in the three-dimensional iso-intensity contours from both nozzles. In addition, the transport of seeded nozzle fluid was enhanced by the spatial mode excitation for both nozzles. Spatial mode excitation was also able to affect the shape of the far field contour. In particular, the first counterrotating helical mode, m=±1, generated the greatest effect on nozzle fluid transport and the most pronounced elliptical contour shape in the far field. / Master of Science
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