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Contrôle d'écoulements en vue d'un pilotage alternatif pour les projectiles d'artillerie / Flow control for alternative projectile steeringLibsig, Michel 14 January 2016 (has links)
Afin d'atteindre leur cible, les projectiles guidés d'artillerie nécessitent d'être dotés d'un dispositif de pilotage. Des surfaces de contrôle déployables et orientables sont donc nécessaires. Toutefois, le montage de gouvernes ajustables sur une ogive est une tâche mécaniquement ardue. En effet, lors du tir effectué par canon, l'équipement de bord subit une accélération significative, ce qui implique que des liaisons mécaniques particulièrement robustes doivent être conçues entre les ailettes et le corps. Cette technologie est bien maîtrisée lorsqu'elle est employée sur des projectiles de gros calibre, mais devient bien plus compliquée quand elle doit être adaptée pour être intégrée dans des petits ou moyens calibres. Néanmoins, dans des conditions de vol supersonique, des ondes de choc qui interagissent avec des surfaces solides sont susceptibles de considérablement modifier la distribution de pression. Ce principe a permis d'imaginer une méthode alternative de pilotage de projectiles supersoniques en exploitant des ondes de choc générées au moyen de petites perturbations créées à partir d'un micro-actionneur de forme cylindrique, aussi appelé micro-plot. Comme les forces de portance exercée sur un corps sont essentiellement dues à une pression appliquée sur de grandes surfaces, il a été choisi de se baser sur une configuration stabilisée par empennage. En vue de simplifier l'étude, le travail a été effectué sur un projectile académique de référence bien connu appelé le Basic Finner.Des expériences ont tout d'abord été effectuées dans la soufflerie supersonique de l'ISL sur une plaque plane comportant un plot et deux ailettes verticales. Ces mesures ont permis de valider la capacité de simulations numériques stationnaires RANS à prédire à la fois la distribution pariétale de la pression que génère un tel actionneur et le champ de vitesse de l'écoulement dans son voisinage. Les distributions de pression et de vitesse ont été mesurées en utilisant des méthodes optiques appelés Pressure Sensitive Paints (PSP) et Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) afin d'être comparés avec les résultats de la CFD. Une étude paramétrique a ensuite été menée en se basant exclusivement sur ces simulations RANS. Ces calculs ont permis de déterminer l'emplacement optimal pour lequel le plot est le plus efficace sur toute l'enveloppe de vol du projectile. A partir de cette position optimale, deux configurations spécifiques ne générant aucun moment de roulis ont été étudiées numériquement et comparés en termes d'efficacité. En utilisant les coefficients aérodynamiques résultants de ce travail, des simulations de trajectoires à 6 degrés de liberté (6-DOF) ont été réalisées avec le code de BALCO (OTAN). Celles-ci ont permis de déterminer la déviation potentielle qui peut être obtenue sur une des deux configurations retenues en employant un tel micro-actionneur. Ces simulations 6-DOF ainsi que l'effet de du plot sur le projectile ont enfin été validés lors d'une campagne d'essai en vol libre qui a eu lieu sur le champ de tir de l'ISL. / In order to reach their target, guided artillery projectiles need some steering capability. Folding and adjustable control surfaces are thus necessary. However, mounting adjustable rudders on a shell is a difficult task, mechanically speaking. Indeed, during the gun launch, the onboard equipment undergoes significant acceleration so that robust mechanical joints have to be designed between the rudders and the body. This technique performs very well on large-caliber projectiles, but becomes more complicated when it has to be embedded in small- or medium-caliber ones. Nevertheless, under supersonic flight conditions, shock waves interacting with solid surfaces are likely to strongly modify the pressure distribution. This principle made it possible to imagine a way of steering small-caliber vehicles using shock waves generated by means of small disturbances created by a cylindrical-shaped micro-actuator, also called micro-pin. As lift forces exerted on a body are mainly due to the pressure applied to large surfaces, a finned configuration has been chosen. To simplify the study, the work has been conducted on the Basic Finner, a well known academic reference projectile.Experiments were first performed in the ISL supersonic wind tunnel on a flat plate on which a pin and two vertical projectile-like fins were mounted in order to validate the capability of steady RANS numerical simulations to predict both the pressure footprint of such an actuator and the flow velocity in its vicinity. Pressure and velocity distributions have been measured by using optical methods called Pressure-Sensitive Paint (PSP) and Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) in order to be compared with the calculation results. A parametric study was then conducted with these RANS simulations so that the optimum location for which the pin is the most effective over the complete flight envelope of the projectile could be determined. Using this optimum position two specific no-roll momentum configurations were studied numerically and compared in terms of effectiveness. By using the aerodynamic coefficients resulting from this work, 6-Degree-Of-Freedom (6-DOF) trajectory simulations were performed with the NATO BALCO code on one of these configurations in order to determine the potential deviation which can be obtained with such an actuator. These 6-DOF simulations as well as the pin effect on the projectile could finally be validated during a free-flight campaign that took place at the ISL open-range testing site.
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Investigation of fluid-dynamic cavity oscillations and the effects of flow angle in an automotive context using an open-jet wind tunnel.Milbank, Juliette, milbank@turbulenflow.com.au January 2005 (has links)
Aeroacoustic whistles are a significant source of customer complaints to automotive manufacturers. Whistles can occur on many such components, but the relative position and configuration of rearview mirrors means they are a more problematic source of tonal noise on vehicles. The low subsonic complex turbulent flow, combined with small cavity scales, determines the possible whistle mechanisms. The one considered to be most problematic, fluid-dynamic cavity resonance, is the topic of this research thesis. The research scope is limited to the automotive environment of external rearview mirrors and the fluid-dynamic resonance mechanism: low subsonic Mach number, M = 0.05 - 0.13; laminar boundary layers; and two-dimensional, acoustically compact cavities. The low unit-cost of rearview mirrors and the desire to have simple identification and prediction schemes, that could be used by production engineers, determined an empirical approach. A search of the existing literature revealed that there were some data on cavities of the above scale in low Mach number flow, but quoted errors in empirical descriptions were large and there was very little research on the effects of flow yaw angle on the chosen resonance mechanism. The research therefore aims to determine whether existing empirical descriptions of fluid-dynamic cavity resonance are suitable for the prediction of the resonance characteristics, with sufficient accuracy to enable unambiguous identification of the presence of the resonance and its mechanism. A second aim is to investigate the effects of a feature of the automotive flow environment, flow yaw angle, on the resonance. Flow yaw angle is determined by those components of the flow in the same plane as the surface in which the cavity is situated. An experimental program was undertaken using a purpose-built aeroacoustic wind tunnel and a simple cavity model. Testing with two types of cavity configurations, as well as flow visualisation, investigated the main features of the resonance in time-averaged yawed flow. Within the scope of this thesis, it is shown that fluid-dynamic cavity resonance characteristics can be accurately identified by a simple empirical model, even in yawed flow. Various descriptors allow identification of the resonance threshold, stage, frequency and relative amplitude in non-yawed flow, while the frequency and stage can also be identified in yawed flow. The relative decrease in resonance amplitude in yawed flow, although identified for these experiments, would depend on the degree of spanwise variation in the boundary layer characteristics for a given cavity configuration. The results also identify significant issues with testing in a free jet tunnel, due to the nature of fluid-dynamic cavity resonance and the fluctuation energy content in free shear layers. Despite this, the thesis aims are achieved, and appropriate design guidelines are produced for automotive designers.
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Aeroelastic Concepts for Flexible Aircraft StructuresHeinze, Sebastian January 2007 (has links)
In this thesis, aeroelastic concepts for increased aircraft performance are developed and evaluated. Active aeroelastic concepts are in focus as well as robust analysis concepts aiming at efficient analysis using numerical models with uncertain or varying model parameters. The thesis presents different approaches for exploitation of fluid-structure interaction of active aeroelastic structures. First, a high aspect ratio wing in wind tunnel testing conditions is considered. The wing was developed within the European research project \textit{Active Aeroelastic Aircraft Structures} and used to demonstrate how structural flexibility can be exploited by using multiple control surfaces such that the deformed wing shape gives minimum drag for different flight conditions. Two different drag minimization studies are presented, one aiming at reduced induced drag based on numerical optimization techniques, another one aiming at reduced measured total drag using real-time optimization in the wind tunnel experiment. The same wing is also used for demonstration of an active concept for gust load alleviation using a piezoelectric tab. In all studies on the high aspect ratio wing, it is demonstrated that structural flexibility can be exploited to increase aircraft performance. Other studies in this thesis investigate the applicability of robust control tools for flutter analysis considering model uncertainty and variation. First, different techniques for taking large structural variations into account are evaluated. Next, a high-fidelity numerical model of an aircraft with a variable amount of fuel is considered, and robust analysis is applied to find the worst-case fuel configuration. Finally, a study investigating the influence of uncertain external stores aerodynamics is presented. Overall, the robust approach is shown to be capable of treating large structural variations as well as modeling uncertainties to compute worst-case configurations and flutter boundaries. / QC 20100713
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Receptivity of Laminar Boundary Layers to Spanwise-periodic Forcing by an Array of Plasma ActuatorsOsmokrovic, Luke 26 November 2012 (has links)
This work is concerned with the response of a Blasius boundary layer to dielectric-barrier-discharge (DBD) plasma actuators for the purpose of using these devices in bypass transition control. The plasma actuators consist of a spanwise-periodic array of high voltage electrodes, which are oriented to produce streamwise vortex pairs. The structure of actuator-induced streaks is measured using hot-wire anemometry over a streamwise distance of approximately 100 boundary layer thicknesses, and is decomposed into 4 spanwise Fourier modes. The modal content and corresponding streamwise growth characteristics are discussed for ten plasma actuator geometries over multiple excitation voltages and freestream velocities. Actuator power consumption was found to control the streak amplitude, whereas freestream velocity affected both amplitude and streamwise extent of the streaks. A common relationship between disturbance energy and power consumption was found among actuators of different dielectric thickness and similar electrode geometry.
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Receptivity of Laminar Boundary Layers to Spanwise-periodic Forcing by an Array of Plasma ActuatorsOsmokrovic, Luke 26 November 2012 (has links)
This work is concerned with the response of a Blasius boundary layer to dielectric-barrier-discharge (DBD) plasma actuators for the purpose of using these devices in bypass transition control. The plasma actuators consist of a spanwise-periodic array of high voltage electrodes, which are oriented to produce streamwise vortex pairs. The structure of actuator-induced streaks is measured using hot-wire anemometry over a streamwise distance of approximately 100 boundary layer thicknesses, and is decomposed into 4 spanwise Fourier modes. The modal content and corresponding streamwise growth characteristics are discussed for ten plasma actuator geometries over multiple excitation voltages and freestream velocities. Actuator power consumption was found to control the streak amplitude, whereas freestream velocity affected both amplitude and streamwise extent of the streaks. A common relationship between disturbance energy and power consumption was found among actuators of different dielectric thickness and similar electrode geometry.
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極超音速TSTOにおける衝撃波干渉・境界層剥離を伴う流れ場の解析北村, 圭一, KITAMURA, Keiichi, 小澤, 啓伺, OZAWA, Hiroshi, 花井, 勝祥, HANAI, Katsuhisa, 森, 浩一, MORI, Koichi, 中村, 佳朗, NAKAMURA, Yoshiaki 05 June 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Aeroelastic analysis and testing of supersonic inflatable aerodynamic deceleratorsTanner, Christopher Lee 17 January 2012 (has links)
The current limits of supersonic parachute technology may constrain the ability to safely land future robotic assets on the surface of Mars. This constraint has led to a renewed interest in supersonic inflatable aerodynamic decelerator (IAD) technology, which offers performance advantages over the DGB parachute. Two supersonic IAD designs of interest include the isotensoid and tension cone, named for their respective formative structural theories. Although these concepts have been the subject of various tests and analyses in the 1960s, 1970s, and 2000s, significant work remains to advance supersonic IADs to a technology readiness level that will enable their use on future flight missions. In particular, a review of the literature revealed a deficiency in adequate aerodynamic and aeroelastic data for these two IAD configurations at transonic and subsonic speeds. The first portion of this research amended this deficiency by testing flexible IAD articles at relevant transonic and subsonic conditions. The data obtained from these tests showed that the tension cone has superior drag performance with respect to the isotensoid, but that the isotensoid may demonstrate more favorable aeroelastic qualities than the tension cone.
Additionally, despite the best efforts in test article design, there remains ambiguity regarding the accuracy of the observed subscale behavior for flight scale IADs. Due to the expense and complexity of large-scale testing, computational fluid-structure interaction (FSI) analyses will play an increasingly significant role in qualifying flight scale IADs for mission readiness. The second portion of this research involved the verification and validation of finite element analysis (FEA) and computational fluid dynamic (CFD) codes for use within an FSI framework. These verification and validation exercises lend credence to subsequent coupled FSI analyses involving more complex geometries and models. The third portion of this research used this FSI framework to predict the static aeroelastic response of a tension cone IAD in supersonic flow. Computational models were constructed to mimic the wind tunnel test articles and flow conditions. Converged FSI responses computed for the tension cone agreed reasonably well with wind tunnel data when orthotropic material models were used and indicated that current material models may require unrealistic input parameters in order to recover realistic deformations. These FSI analyses are among the first results published that present an extensive comparison between FSI computational models and wind tunnel data for a supersonic IAD.
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Aerodynamic Modeling of Post-Stall and Spin Dynamics of Large Transport AirplanesMurch, Austin Matthew 08 1900 (has links)
This work addressed aerodynamic modeling methods for prediction of post-stall flight dynamics of large transport aircraft. This was accomplished by applying historically successful modeling methods used on high-performance military aircraft to a transport configuration. The overall research approach involved integrating forced oscillation and rotary balance wind tunnel data into an aerodynamic model using several methods of blending these data. The complete aerodynamic model was integrated into a six degree-of-freedom simulation. Experimental data from free-spin wind tunnel testing was used to validate the aerodynamic modeling methods by comparing aerodynamic force and moment coefficients and also to validate the simulation performance by comparing spin mode characteristics and time histories. The aerodynamic model prediction of spin dynamics was generally very good using all of the blending methods studied. In addition, key spin mode characteristics were predicted with a high degree of accuracy. Overall, using the Hybrid Kalviste method of blending forced oscillation and rotary balance data produced the closest match to the free-spin data when comparing aerodynamic coefficients and spin mode characteristics. Several issues were encountered with the blending methods that were exacerbated by nonlinearities and asymmetries in the dynamic aerodynamic data. A new method of looking up dynamic aerodynamic data was proposed to address shortcomings in the blending methods and recommendations were provided on addressing issues with the dynamic aerodynamic data.
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Experimental investigation of film cooling and thermal barrier coatings on a gas turbine vane with conjugate heat transfer effectsKistenmacher, David Alan 19 November 2013 (has links)
In the United States, natural gas turbine generators account for approximately 7% of the total primary energy consumed. A one percent increase in gas turbine efficiency could result in savings of approximately 30 million dollars for operators and, subsequently, electricity end-users. The efficiency of a gas turbine engine is tied directly to the temperature at which the products of combustion enter the first stage, high-pressure turbine. The maximum operating temperature of the turbine components’ materials is the major limiting factor in increasing the turbine inlet temperature. In fact, current turbine inlet temperatures regularly exceed the melting temperature of the turbine vanes through advanced vane cooling techniques. These cooling techniques include vane surface film cooling, internal vane cooling, and the addition of a thermal barrier coating (TBC) to the exterior of the turbine vane. Typically, the performance of vane cooling techniques is evaluated using the adiabatic film effectiveness. However, the adiabatic film effectiveness, by definition, does not consider conjugate heat transfer effects. In order to evaluate the performance of internal vane cooling and a TBC it is necessary to consider conjugate heat transfer effects. The goal of this study was to provide insight into the conjugate heat transfer behavior of actual turbine vanes and various vane cooling techniques through experimental and analytical modeling in the pursuit of higher turbine inlet temperatures resulting in higher overall turbine efficiencies.
The primary focus of this study was to experimentally characterize the combined effects of a TBC and film cooling. Vane model experiments were performed using a 10x scaled first stage inlet guide vane model that was designed using the Matched Biot Method to properly scale both the geometrical and thermal properties of an actual turbine vane. Two different TBC thicknesses were evaluated in this study. Along with the TBCs, six different film cooling configurations were evaluated which included pressure side round holes with a showerhead, round holes only, craters, a novel trench design called the modified trench, an ideal trench, and a realistic trench that takes manufacturing abilities into account. These film cooling geometries were created within the TBC layer. Each of the vane configurations was evaluated by monitoring a variety of temperatures, including the temperature of the exterior vane wall and the exterior surface of the TBC. This study found that the presence of a TBC decreased the sensitivity of the thermal barrier coating and vane wall interface temperature to changes in film coolant flow rates and changes in film cooling geometry. Therefore, research into improved film cooling geometries may not be valuable when a TBC is incorporated. This study also developed an analytical model which was used to predict the performance of the TBCs as a design tool. The analytical prediction model provided reasonable agreement with experimental data when using baseline data from an experiment with another TBC. However, the analytical prediction model performed poorly when predicting a TBC’s performance using baseline data collected from an experiment without a TBC. / text
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On recessed cavity flame-holders in supersonic cross-flowsRetaureau, Ghislain J. 03 April 2012 (has links)
Flame-holding in a recessed cavity is investigated experimentally in a Mach 2.5 preheated cross-flow for both stable and unstable combustion, with a relatively low preheating. Self-sustained combustion is investigated for stagnation pressures and temperatures reaching 1.4 MPa and 750 K. In particular, cavity blowout is characterized with respect to cavity aspect ratio (L/D =2.84 - 3.84), injection strategy (floor - ramp), aft ramp angle (90 deg - 22.5 deg) and multi-fuel mixture (CH₄-H₂ or CH₄-C₂H₄ blends). The results show that small hydrogen addition to methane leads to significant increase in flame stability, whereas ethylene addition has a more gradual effect. Since the multi-fuels used here are composed of a slow and a fast chemistry fuel, the resulting blowout region has a slow (methane dominant) and a fast (hydrogen or ethylene dominant) branch. Regardless of the fuel composition, the pressure at blowout is close to the non-reacting pressure imposed by the cross-flow, suggesting that combustion becomes potentially unsustainable in the cavity at the sub-atmospheric pressures encountered in these supersonic studies. The effect of preheating is also investigated and results show that the stability domain broadens with increasing stagnation temperature. However, smaller cavities appear less sensitive to the cross-flow preheating, and stable combustion is achieved over a smaller range of fuel flow rate, which may be the result of limited residence and mixing time. The blowout data point obtained at lower fuel flow rate fairly matches the empirical model developed by Rasmussen et al. for floor injection phi = 0.0028 Da^-.8, where phi is the equivalence ratio and Da the Damkohler number. An alternate model is proposed here that takes into account the ignition to scale the blowout data. Since the mass of air entrained into the cavity cannot be accurately estimated and the cavity temperature is only approximated from the wall temperature, the proposed scaling has some uncertainty. Nevertheless the new phi-Da scaling is shown to preserve the subtleties of the blowout trends as seen in the current experimental data.
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