Abstract
An experiment conducted in a pressurized, cryogenic wind tunnel demonstrates that unsteady flow control using oscillatory blowing (with essentially zero mass flux) can effectively delay flow separation and reattach separated flow on an airfoil at chord Reynolds numbers as high as 38×106. Oscillatory blowing at frequencies that generate one to three vortices over the controlled region at all times are effective over the entire Reynolds number range, in accordance with previous low-Reynolds-number tests. Stall is delayed and poststall characteristics are improved when oscillatory blowing is applied from the leading-edge region of the airfoil, whereas flap effectiveness is increased when control is applied at the flap shoulder. Similar gains in airfoil performance require steady blowing with a momentum coefficient that is two orders of magnitude greater. A detailed experimental and theoretical investigation was undertaken to characterize the oscillatory blowing disturbance, in the absence of external flow, and to estimate the oscillatory blowing momentum coefficient used in the cryogenic wind tunnel experiment. Possible approaches toward closed-loop active separation control are also presented. Based on the findings of the present investigation, the application of active separation control at incompressible flight Reynolds number is within reach.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1062-1071 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | AIAA Journal |
Volume | 37 |
Issue number | 9 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Sep 1999 |