Ducted Tail Rotor Perfomance Prediction Using CFD

Aviation industry has a crucial impact on society on the grounds that it offers wider social and economic benefits. The demand of transportation is increasing and it is expected that the worldwide fleet of aircraft and rotorcraft will increase accordingly. This growth will introduce an increased env...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Karamolegkos, Konstantinos
Other Authors: Pachidis, Vassilios
Language:en
Published: Cranfield University 2015
Subjects:
CFD
Online Access:http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/9241
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spelling ndltd-CRANFIELD1-oai-dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk-1826-92412015-06-13T03:35:06ZDucted Tail Rotor Perfomance Prediction Using CFDKaramolegkos, KonstantinosDucted tail rotorConventional tail rotorEdgewise flowCFDPerformance MappingAviation industry has a crucial impact on society on the grounds that it offers wider social and economic benefits. The demand of transportation is increasing and it is expected that the worldwide fleet of aircraft and rotorcraft will increase accordingly. This growth will introduce an increased environmental impact which can be controlled with the introduction and the implementation of new and greener technologies which can provide both a reduced carbon foot-print and increased efficiency. Therefore, the simulation of new designs with tools that can capture the flow physics accurately is crucial, on the grounds that an accurate simulation could provide novel designs and new ways in order to design from scratch new vehicles as well as providing a better appreciation of the physics that are involved. This work has a central aim to propose a methodology which combines CFD simulations and the method of performance mapping. It focuses on the application of a ducted tail rotor which can offer significant performance benefits compared to a conventional tail rotor. The developed methodology was tested against the results of an in-house rotorcraft comprehensive code and provided a reasonable qualitative correlation. In principle, this methodology can work for all helicopter flight phases such as hover, climb, cruise, descend but due to the complexity of the investigations, together with the lack of experimental data that can be used to refine the CFD model, only the hover and forward flight were considered. Although CFD studies of a ducted tail rotor currently exist in the literature (though scarce), this work can be considered, to the best knowledge of the author as a first attempt in investigating the performance of the configuration, from low to high forward flight speed, by combining CFD and performance mapping.Cranfield UniversityPachidis, Vassilios2015-06-12T14:57:27Z2015-06-12T14:57:27Z2014-05-12Thesis or dissertationDoctoralPhDhttp://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/9241en© Cranfield University 2014. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright holder.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Ducted tail rotor
Conventional tail rotor
Edgewise flow
CFD
Performance Mapping
spellingShingle Ducted tail rotor
Conventional tail rotor
Edgewise flow
CFD
Performance Mapping
Karamolegkos, Konstantinos
Ducted Tail Rotor Perfomance Prediction Using CFD
description Aviation industry has a crucial impact on society on the grounds that it offers wider social and economic benefits. The demand of transportation is increasing and it is expected that the worldwide fleet of aircraft and rotorcraft will increase accordingly. This growth will introduce an increased environmental impact which can be controlled with the introduction and the implementation of new and greener technologies which can provide both a reduced carbon foot-print and increased efficiency. Therefore, the simulation of new designs with tools that can capture the flow physics accurately is crucial, on the grounds that an accurate simulation could provide novel designs and new ways in order to design from scratch new vehicles as well as providing a better appreciation of the physics that are involved. This work has a central aim to propose a methodology which combines CFD simulations and the method of performance mapping. It focuses on the application of a ducted tail rotor which can offer significant performance benefits compared to a conventional tail rotor. The developed methodology was tested against the results of an in-house rotorcraft comprehensive code and provided a reasonable qualitative correlation. In principle, this methodology can work for all helicopter flight phases such as hover, climb, cruise, descend but due to the complexity of the investigations, together with the lack of experimental data that can be used to refine the CFD model, only the hover and forward flight were considered. Although CFD studies of a ducted tail rotor currently exist in the literature (though scarce), this work can be considered, to the best knowledge of the author as a first attempt in investigating the performance of the configuration, from low to high forward flight speed, by combining CFD and performance mapping.
author2 Pachidis, Vassilios
author_facet Pachidis, Vassilios
Karamolegkos, Konstantinos
author Karamolegkos, Konstantinos
author_sort Karamolegkos, Konstantinos
title Ducted Tail Rotor Perfomance Prediction Using CFD
title_short Ducted Tail Rotor Perfomance Prediction Using CFD
title_full Ducted Tail Rotor Perfomance Prediction Using CFD
title_fullStr Ducted Tail Rotor Perfomance Prediction Using CFD
title_full_unstemmed Ducted Tail Rotor Perfomance Prediction Using CFD
title_sort ducted tail rotor perfomance prediction using cfd
publisher Cranfield University
publishDate 2015
url http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/9241
work_keys_str_mv AT karamolegkoskonstantinos ductedtailrotorperfomancepredictionusingcfd
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