4.7 Article

Unsteady aerodynamics of reverse flow dynamic stall on an oscillating blade section

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 28, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.4958334

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Army/Navy/NASA Vertical Lift Research Center of Excellence [W911W6-11-2-0012]

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Wind tunnel experiments were performed on a sinusoidally oscillating NACA 0012 blade section in reverse flow. Time-resolved particle image velocimetry and unsteady surface pressure measurements were used to characterize the evolution of reverse flow dynamic stall and its sensitivity to pitch and flow parameters. The effects of a sharp aerodynamic leading edge on the fundamental flow physics of reverse flow dynamic stall are explored in depth. Reynolds number was varied up to Re = 5 x 10(5), reduced frequency was varied up to k = 0.511, mean pitch angle was varied up to 15, and two pitch amplitudes of 5 degrees and 10 degrees were studied. It was found that reverse flow dynamic stall of the NACA 0012 airfoil is weakly sensitive to the Reynolds numbers tested due to flow separation at the sharp aerodynamic leading degrees edge. Reduced frequency strongly affects the onset and persistence of dynamic stall vortices. The type of dynamic stall observed (i.e., number of vortex structures) increases with a decrease in reduced frequency and increase in maximum pitch angle. The characterization and parameter sensitivity of reverse flow dynamic stall given in the present work will enable the development of a physics-based analytical model of this unsteady aerodynamic phenomenon. Published by AIP Publishing.

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