Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T10:10:09.888Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Computational aeroelastic analysis of slowed rotors at high advance ratios

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2016

J. de Montaudouin*
Affiliation:
Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
N. Reveles*
Affiliation:
Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
M. J. Smith*
Affiliation:
Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Abstract

The aerodynamic and aeroelastic behaviour of a rotor become more complex as advance ratios increase to achieve high-speed forward fight. As the rotor blades encounter large regions of cross and reverse flows during each revolution, strong variations in the local Mach regime are encountered, inducing complex elastic blade deformations. In addition, the wake system may remain in the vicinity of the rotor, adding complexity to the blade loading. The aeroelastic behaviour of a model rotor with advance ratios ranging from 0·5 to 2·0 has been evaluated with aerodynamics provided via a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) method. Significant radial blade-vortex interaction can occur at a high advance ratio; the advance ratio at which this occurs is dependent on the rotor configuration. This condition is accompanied by high vibratory loads, peak negative torsion, and peak torsion and in-plane loads. The high vibratory loading increases the sensitivity of the trim model, so that at some high advance ratios the vibratory loads must be filtered to achieve a trimmed state.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Kisielowski, E., Bumstead, R., Fissel, P. and Chinsky, I. Generalized Rotor Performance, US Army Aviation Material Laboratories Technical Report 66-83, AD 648874, 1966.Google Scholar
2. Tanner, W. Charts for Estimating Rotary Wing Performance in Hover and at High Forward Speeds, NASA CR-114, 1964.Google Scholar
3. Sweet, G., Jenkins, J.L. and Winston, M.M. Wind-Tunnel Measurements on a Lifting Rotor at High Thrust Coefficients and High Tip-Speed Ratios, NASA TN D-2462, 1964.Google Scholar
4. Ekquist, D. Design and Wind-tunnel Test of a Model Helicopter Rotor Having an Independently Moveable Inboard Blade Panel, USAAVLABS-TR-65-63, Army Aviation Materiel Labs, Ft Eustis, Vaginia, USA, October 1965.Google Scholar
5. McCloud, J., Biggers, J. and Stroub, R. An Investigation of Full-Scale Helicopter Rotors at High Advance Ratios and Advancing Tip Mach Numbers, NASA TN D-4632, 1968.Google Scholar
6. McHugh, F.J. and Harris, F.D. Have We Overlooked the Full Potential of the Conventional Rotor, American Helicopter Society 31st Annual Forum, Washington, DC, USA, 13-15 May 1975.Google Scholar
7. Harris, F., JrTarzanin, F. and JrFisher, R. Rotor high speed performance, theory vs test, J American Helicopter Society, 1970, 15, (3), pp 3541.Google Scholar
8. McCutcheon, R. S-67 Flight Test Program, American Helicopter Society 28th Annual Forum, Washington, DC, USA, May 1972.Google Scholar
9. Sissingh, G. Dynamics of rotors operating at high advance ratios, J American Helicopter Society, 1968, 13, (3), pp 5663.Google Scholar
10. Carter, J. Extreme mu rotor, 2006, US Patent 6,986,642.Google Scholar
11. Quakenbush, T.R. and Wachspress, D.A. Measurement and Analysis of High Advance Ratio Rotor Performance, American Helicopter Society 64th Annual Forum, Montreal, Canada, 29-1 April-May 2008.Google Scholar
12. Quakenbush, T.R., Wachspress, D.A., (Jr)McKillip, R.M. and Sibilia, M.J. Experimental and Analytical Studies of Lifting Rotor Performance at High Advance Ratios. American Helicopter Society Aeromechanics Specialists Conference, San Francisco, California, USA, 20-22 January 2010.Google Scholar
13. Datta, A., Yeo, H. and Norman, T.R. Experimental Investigation and Fundamental Understanding of a Slowed UH-60A Rotor at High Advance Ratios, American Helicopter Society 67th Annual Forum, Virginia Beach, Virginia, USA, 3-5 May 2011.Google Scholar
14. Yeo, H. and Johnson, W. Optimum design of a compound helicopter, AIAA J Aircr, July-August 2009, 46, (4), pp 12101221.Google Scholar
15. Ormiston, R.A. Rotor Aerodynamic Characteristics at High Advance Ratio Relevant to Compound Rotorcraft, American Helicopter Society Vertical Lift Aircraft Design Conference, San Francisco, California, USA, January 2012.Google Scholar
16. Floros, M.W. and Johnson, W. Performance Analysis of the Slowed-Rotor Compound Helicopter Configuration. American Helicopter Society Aeromechanics Specialists Conference, San Francisco, California, USA, 21-23 January, 2004.Google Scholar
17. Johnson, W. Rotorcraft Dynamics Models for a Comprehensive Analysis, American Helicopter Society 52nd Annual Forum, Washington DC, USA, 16-18 June 1988.Google Scholar
18. Sopher, R. and Hallock, D. Time-History Analysis for Rotorcraft Dynamics Based on a Component Approach, NASA Ames Research Center and American Helicopter Society 2nd Decennial Specialists’ Meeting on Rotorcraft Dynamics, Moffett Field, California, 7-9 November 1984. See also Rotorcraft Dynamics, 1984, NASA CP 2400, November 1985.Google Scholar
19. Benoit, B., Dequin, A.M., Kampa, K., Grunhagen, W., Basset, P.-M. and Gimonet, B. HOST: A General Helicopter Simulation Tool For Germany and France, American Helicopter Society 56th Annual Forum, Virginia Beach, VA, USA, 2-4 May 2000.Google Scholar
20. Bauchau, O.A., Bottasso, C.L. and Nikishkov, Y.G. Modeling rotorcraft dynamics with finite element multibody procedures, 2001, Mathematical and Computer Modeling, 33, (10-11), pp 111311371.Google Scholar
21. Boschitsch, A., Quakenbush, T. and Wachspress, D.A. First-Principles Free-Vortex Wake Model for Helicopters and Tiltrotors, American Helicopter Society 59th Annual Forum, Phoenix, Arizona, USA, 2003.Google Scholar
22. Ormiston, R.A. A New Formulation for Lifting Rotor Performance Including Comparison with Full-Scale Data. American Helicopter Society Annual Forum, Montreal, Canada, 29 April-1 May, 2008.Google Scholar
23. Shelton, A.B., Braman, K., Smith, M.J. and Menon, S. Improved Turbulence Modeling for Rotorcraft, American Helicopter Society 62nd Annual Forum, Phoenix, Arizona, USA, 9-11 May, 2006.Google Scholar
24. Potsdam, M., Yeo, H. and Johnson, W. Rotor airloads prediction using loose aerodynamic/structural coupling, AIAA J Aircraft, May-June 2006, 43, (3), pp 732742.Google Scholar
25. Abras, J., Lynch, C.E., and Smith, M. Computational Fluid Dynamics-computational structural dynamics rotor coupling using an unstructured Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes methodology, J American Helicopter Society, 2012, 57, (1), pp 114, doi: 10.4050/JAHS.57.01200.Google Scholar
26. Datta, A., Nixon, M. and Chopra, I. Review of rotor loads prediction with the emergence of rotorcraft CFD, J American Helicopter Society, October 2007, 52, (4), pp 287317.Google Scholar
27. Beaumier, P., Costes, M., Rodriquez, B, Poinot, M. and Cantaloube, B. Weak and Strong Coupling Between the elsA CFD Solver and the HOST Helicopter Comprehensive Analysis, 31st European Rotorcraft Forum, Florence, Italy, 13-15 September 2005.Google Scholar
28. Bhagwat, M., Dimanlig, A.C.B., Saberi, H.A., Medowcroft, E.T., Panda, B. and Strawn, R. CFD-CSD-Coupled Trim Solution for the Dual-Rotor CH-47 Helicopter Including Fuselage Modeling, American Helicopter Society Aeromechanics Specialists Meeting, San Francisco, California, USA, 23-25 January 2008.Google Scholar
29. Biedron, R. and Lee-Rausch, E. Rotor Airloads Prediction Using Unstructured Meshes and Loose CFD-CSD Coupling, AIAA Paper 2008-7341, 26th AIAA Applied Aerodynamics Conference, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA, 18-21 August 2008.Google Scholar
30. Boyd, D.D. HART-II Acoustic Predictions using a Coupled CFD/CSD Method, American Helicopter Society 65th Annual Forum, Grapevine, Texas, USA, 27-29 May 2009.Google Scholar
31. Dimanlig, A., Jayaraman, B., Lim, J. and Wissink, A. Application of Adaptive Mesh Refinement Technique in Helios to Blade-Vortex Interaction Loading and Rotor Wakes, American Helicopter Society 67th Annual Forum, Virginia Beach, Virginia, USA, 3-5 May 2011.Google Scholar
32. Johnson, W. Requirements for Next Generation Comprehensive Analysis of Rotorcraft, American Helicopter Society Aeromechanics Specialists Conference, San Francisco, California, USA, 23-25 January 2008.Google Scholar
33. Chan, W., Meakin, R. and Potsdam, M. CHSSI Software for Geometrically Complex Unsteady Aerodynamic Applications, AIAA Paper 2001-0593, 15th AIAA Computational Fluid Dynamics Conference, Anaheim, California, USA, 11-14 June 2001.Google Scholar
34. Menter, F. Two-equation eddy-viscosity turbulence models for engineering applications, AIAA J, 1994, 32, (8), pp 15981605.Google Scholar
35. Sanchez-Rocha, M. and Menon, S. The compressible hybrid RANS/LES Formulation using an additive operator, J Computational Physics, 228, 2009, pp 20372062.Google Scholar
36. Montaudouin (de), J., Heo, S.D., Smith, M.J. and Bauchau, O.A. Aerodynamic and Aeroelastic Analysis of Rotors at High Advance Ratios, 36th European Rotorcraft Forum, Paris, France, 6-9 September 2010.Google Scholar
37. Smith, M.J., Lim, J.W., van der Wall, B.G., Baeder, J., Biedron, R.T., Boyd, D.D.J., Jayaraman, B., Jung, S. and Min, B.-Y., The HART II international workshop: an assessment of the state-of-the-art in CFD/CSD prediction, CEAS Aeronaut J, 2013, 4:223–252 DOI 10.1007/s13272-013-0077-9.Google Scholar
38. Lim, J.W. An Assessment of Rotor Dynamics Correlation for Descending Flight Using CFD/CSD Coupled Analysis. American Helicopter Society 64th Annual Forum, Montreal, Canada, 29 April – 1 May 1 2008.Google Scholar
39. Jose, A.I., Ananthan, S. and Baeder, J.D. CFD/CSD Simulation of Baseline UH-60 and Swashplateless Rotors. American Helicopter Society Aeromechanics Specialists Conference, San Francisco, California, USA, 20-22 January 2010.Google Scholar
40. Potsdam, M., Datta, A. and Jayaraman, B. Computational Investigation and Fundamental Understanding of a Slowed UH-60A Rotor at High Advance Ratios. American Helicopter Society 64th Annual Forum, Fort Worth, Texas, USA, 1-3 May 2012.Google Scholar
41. Yeo, H. Investigation of UH-60A rotor performance and loads at high advance ratios, AIAA J Aircr, 2013, March-April, 50, (2), pp 576589.Google Scholar
42. Kottapalli, S. Performance and Loads Correlation of a UH-60A Slowed Rotor at High Advance Ratios, American Helicopter Society Vertical Lift Aircraft Design Conference, San Francisco, California, USA, January 2012.Google Scholar
43. Potsdam, M., Yeo, H. and Ormiston, R.A. Performance and Loads Predictions of a Slowed UH-60A Rotor at High Advance Ratios, 39th European Rotorcraft Forum, Moscow, Russia, September, 2013.Google Scholar