High Fidelity Aeroelasticity Simulations of Aircraft and Turbomachinery with Fully-Coupled Fluid-Structure Interaction

High Fidelity Aeroelasticity Simulations of Aircraft and Turbomachinery with Fully-Coupled Fluid-Structure Interaction PDF Author: Jiaye Gan
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :

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Book Description
The purpose of this research is to develop high fidelity numerical methods to investigate the complex aeroelasticity fluid-structural problems of aircraft and aircraft engine turbomachinery. Unsteady 3D compressible Navier-Stokes equations in generalized coordinates are solved to simulate the complex fluid dynamic problems in aeroelasticity. An efficient and low diffusion E-CUSP (LDE) scheme designed to minimize numerical dissipation is used as a Riemann solver to capture shock waves in transonic and supersonic flows. An improved hybrid turbulence modeling, delayed detached eddy simulation (DDES), is implemented to simulate shock induced separation and rotating stall flows. High order accuracy (3rd and 5th order) weighted essentially non-oscillatory (WENO) schemes for inviscid flux and a conservative 2nd and 4th order viscous flux differencing are employed. To resolve the nonlinear interaction between flow and vibrating blade structures, a fully coupled fluid-structure interaction (FSI) procedure that solves the structural modal equations and time accurate Navier-Stokes equations simultaneously is adopted. A rotor/stator sliding interpolation technique is developed to accurately capture the blade rows interaction at the interface with general grid distribution. Phase lag boundary conditions (BC) based on the time shift (direct store) method and the Fourier series phase lag BC are applied to consider the effect of phase difference for a sector of annulus simulation. Extensive validations are conducted to demonstrate high accuracy and robustness of the high fidelity FSI methodology. The accuracy and robustness of RANS, URANS and DDES turbulence models with high order schemes for predicting the lift and drag of the DLR-F6 configuration are verified. The DDES predicts the drag very well whereas the URANS model significantly over predicts the drag. DDES of a finned projectile base flows is conducted to further validate the high fidelity methods with vortical flow. The DDES is demonstrated to be superior to the URANS for the projectile flow prediction due to more accurate base vortex structures and pressure prediction. DDES of a 3D transonic wing flutter is validated with AGARD Wing 445.6 aeroelasticity experiment at free stream Mach number varied from subsonic to supersonic. The predicted flutter boundary at different free stream Mach number including the sonic dip achieves very good agreement with the experiment. In particular, the predicted flutter boundaries at the supersonic conditions match the experiment accurately. The mechanism of sonic dip is investigated. It is observed that the amplitude ratio of first bending mode to the second torsion mode is increased dramatically when the sonic dip occurs with a reversed trend to the flutter speed index boundary. The reduced torsional amplitude is attributed to the decreased pitching moment, which appears to be caused by the lift generation shifted toward mid-chord location. Simulation of supersonic fluid-structural interaction of a flat panel is performed by using DDES with high order shock capturing scheme. The panel vibration induced by the shock boundary layer interaction is well resolved by the high fidelity method. The dominant panel response agrees well with the experiment in terms of the mean panel displacement and frequency. The DDES methodology is used to investigate the stall inception of NASA Stage 35 compressor. The process of rotating stall is compared between the results using both URANS and DDES with full annulus. The stall process begins with spike inception and develops to full stall. The numbers of stall cell, and the size and propagating speed of the stall cells are well captured by both URANS and DDES. Two stall cells with 42% rotor rotating speed are resolved by DDES and one stall cell with 90% rotor rotating speed by URANS. It is still not conclusive which method is more accurate since there is no experimental data to compare, but the DDES does show more realistic vortical turbulence with more small scale structures. The non-synchronous vibration (NSV) of a high speed 1-1/2 stage axial compressor is investigated by using rigid blade and vibrating blade with fluid-structural interaction. An interpolation sliding boundary condition is used for the rotor-stator interaction. The URANS simulation with rigid blades shows that the leading edge(LE) circumferentially traveling vortices, roughly above 80% rotor span, travel backwards relative to the rotor rotation and cause an excitation with the frequency agreeing with the measured NSV frequency. The predicted excitation frequency of the traveling vortices in the rigid blade simulation is a non-engine order frequency of 2603 Hz, which agrees very well with the rig measured frequency of 2600 Hz. For the FSI simulation, the results show that there exist two dominant frequencies in the spectrum of the blade vibration. The lower dominant frequency is close to the first bending mode. The higher dominant frequency close to the first torsional mode agrees very well with the measured NSV frequency. To investigate whether the NSV is caused by flow excitation or by flow-structure locked-in phenomenon, the rotating speed is varied within a small RPM range, in which the rig test detected the NSV. The unsteady flows with rigid blades are simulated first at several RPMs. A dominant excitation NSV frequency caused by the circumferentially traveling tip vortices are captured. The simulation then switches to fluid structure interaction that allows the blades to vibrate freely. The simulation indicates that the structure response follows the frequency of the flow excitations that exist with the rigid blades. At least under the present simulated conditions, the NSV does not appear to be a lock-in phenomenon, which has the flow frequency locks in with the structure frequency. Overall, the high fidelity FSI methodology developed in this thesis for aircraft and engine fan/compressor aeroelasticity simulation is demonstrated to be accurate and robust. It has advanced the forefront of the state of the art.

High Fidelity Aeroelasticity Simulations of Aircraft and Turbomachinery with Fully-Coupled Fluid-Structure Interaction

High Fidelity Aeroelasticity Simulations of Aircraft and Turbomachinery with Fully-Coupled Fluid-Structure Interaction PDF Author: Jiaye Gan
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :

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Book Description
The purpose of this research is to develop high fidelity numerical methods to investigate the complex aeroelasticity fluid-structural problems of aircraft and aircraft engine turbomachinery. Unsteady 3D compressible Navier-Stokes equations in generalized coordinates are solved to simulate the complex fluid dynamic problems in aeroelasticity. An efficient and low diffusion E-CUSP (LDE) scheme designed to minimize numerical dissipation is used as a Riemann solver to capture shock waves in transonic and supersonic flows. An improved hybrid turbulence modeling, delayed detached eddy simulation (DDES), is implemented to simulate shock induced separation and rotating stall flows. High order accuracy (3rd and 5th order) weighted essentially non-oscillatory (WENO) schemes for inviscid flux and a conservative 2nd and 4th order viscous flux differencing are employed. To resolve the nonlinear interaction between flow and vibrating blade structures, a fully coupled fluid-structure interaction (FSI) procedure that solves the structural modal equations and time accurate Navier-Stokes equations simultaneously is adopted. A rotor/stator sliding interpolation technique is developed to accurately capture the blade rows interaction at the interface with general grid distribution. Phase lag boundary conditions (BC) based on the time shift (direct store) method and the Fourier series phase lag BC are applied to consider the effect of phase difference for a sector of annulus simulation. Extensive validations are conducted to demonstrate high accuracy and robustness of the high fidelity FSI methodology. The accuracy and robustness of RANS, URANS and DDES turbulence models with high order schemes for predicting the lift and drag of the DLR-F6 configuration are verified. The DDES predicts the drag very well whereas the URANS model significantly over predicts the drag. DDES of a finned projectile base flows is conducted to further validate the high fidelity methods with vortical flow. The DDES is demonstrated to be superior to the URANS for the projectile flow prediction due to more accurate base vortex structures and pressure prediction. DDES of a 3D transonic wing flutter is validated with AGARD Wing 445.6 aeroelasticity experiment at free stream Mach number varied from subsonic to supersonic. The predicted flutter boundary at different free stream Mach number including the sonic dip achieves very good agreement with the experiment. In particular, the predicted flutter boundaries at the supersonic conditions match the experiment accurately. The mechanism of sonic dip is investigated. It is observed that the amplitude ratio of first bending mode to the second torsion mode is increased dramatically when the sonic dip occurs with a reversed trend to the flutter speed index boundary. The reduced torsional amplitude is attributed to the decreased pitching moment, which appears to be caused by the lift generation shifted toward mid-chord location. Simulation of supersonic fluid-structural interaction of a flat panel is performed by using DDES with high order shock capturing scheme. The panel vibration induced by the shock boundary layer interaction is well resolved by the high fidelity method. The dominant panel response agrees well with the experiment in terms of the mean panel displacement and frequency. The DDES methodology is used to investigate the stall inception of NASA Stage 35 compressor. The process of rotating stall is compared between the results using both URANS and DDES with full annulus. The stall process begins with spike inception and develops to full stall. The numbers of stall cell, and the size and propagating speed of the stall cells are well captured by both URANS and DDES. Two stall cells with 42% rotor rotating speed are resolved by DDES and one stall cell with 90% rotor rotating speed by URANS. It is still not conclusive which method is more accurate since there is no experimental data to compare, but the DDES does show more realistic vortical turbulence with more small scale structures. The non-synchronous vibration (NSV) of a high speed 1-1/2 stage axial compressor is investigated by using rigid blade and vibrating blade with fluid-structural interaction. An interpolation sliding boundary condition is used for the rotor-stator interaction. The URANS simulation with rigid blades shows that the leading edge(LE) circumferentially traveling vortices, roughly above 80% rotor span, travel backwards relative to the rotor rotation and cause an excitation with the frequency agreeing with the measured NSV frequency. The predicted excitation frequency of the traveling vortices in the rigid blade simulation is a non-engine order frequency of 2603 Hz, which agrees very well with the rig measured frequency of 2600 Hz. For the FSI simulation, the results show that there exist two dominant frequencies in the spectrum of the blade vibration. The lower dominant frequency is close to the first bending mode. The higher dominant frequency close to the first torsional mode agrees very well with the measured NSV frequency. To investigate whether the NSV is caused by flow excitation or by flow-structure locked-in phenomenon, the rotating speed is varied within a small RPM range, in which the rig test detected the NSV. The unsteady flows with rigid blades are simulated first at several RPMs. A dominant excitation NSV frequency caused by the circumferentially traveling tip vortices are captured. The simulation then switches to fluid structure interaction that allows the blades to vibrate freely. The simulation indicates that the structure response follows the frequency of the flow excitations that exist with the rigid blades. At least under the present simulated conditions, the NSV does not appear to be a lock-in phenomenon, which has the flow frequency locks in with the structure frequency. Overall, the high fidelity FSI methodology developed in this thesis for aircraft and engine fan/compressor aeroelasticity simulation is demonstrated to be accurate and robust. It has advanced the forefront of the state of the art.

A Modern Course in Aeroelasticity

A Modern Course in Aeroelasticity PDF Author: Earl H. Dowell
Publisher: Springer Nature
ISBN: 3030742369
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 828

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Book Description
This book is the sixth edition. It is suitable for one or more courses at the advanced undergraduate level and graduate level to cover the field of aeroelasticity. It is also of value to the research scholar and engineering practitioner who wish to understand the state of the art in the field. This book covers the basics of aeroelasticity or the dynamics of fluid–structure interaction. While the field began in response to the rapid development of aviation, it has now expanded into many branches of engineering and scientific disciplines and treats physical phenomena from aerospace engineering, bioengineering, civil engineering, and mechanical engineering in addition to drawing the attention of mathematicians and physicists. The basic questions addressed are dynamic stability and response of fluid structural systems as revealed by both linear and nonlinear mathematical models and correlation with experiment. The use of scaled models and full-scale experiments and tests play a key role where theory is not considered sufficiently reliable.

A Modern Course in Aeroelasticity

A Modern Course in Aeroelasticity PDF Author: Robert Clark
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
ISBN: 1402021062
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 770

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Book Description
In this new edition, the fundamental material on classical linear aeroelasticity has been revised. Also new material has been added describing recent results on the research frontiers dealing with nonlinear aeroelasticity as well as major advances in the modelling of unsteady aerodynamic flows using the methods of computational fluid dynamics and reduced order modeling techniques. New chapters on aeroelasticity in turbomachinery and aeroelasticity and the latter chapters for a more advanced course, a graduate seminar or as a reference source for an entrée to the research literature.

Simulation of the Transient Aeroelastic Response of a Realistic Aircraft Configuration During Three-dimensional High G Maneuvers

Simulation of the Transient Aeroelastic Response of a Realistic Aircraft Configuration During Three-dimensional High G Maneuvers PDF Author: Charbel Farhat
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Aeroelasticity
Languages : en
Pages : 14

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Book Description
Our long-term objective has been the development of a high-fidelity and high-performance simulation capability for predicting and optimizing the dynamic aeroelastic response of a fighter during three-dimensional high-G maneuvers in subsonic, transonic, and supersonic airstreams. Our focus has been on Air Force problems involving a modern fighter or bomber, and relevant to new approaches for flutter testing, mitigation of limit-cycle (LCO) and pilot induced (P1O) oscillations, as well as performance optimization. Our starting point has been the unique aeroelastic simulation capability developed at the University of Colorado under the sponsorship of the Air Force office of Scientific Research, and in partnership with the Flight Test Center at the Edwards Air Force Base.

Development and Testing of Computational Models of a Flapping Wing and a High Altitude Long Endurance Aircraft for High-fidelity Nonlinear Multidisciplinary Simulations

Development and Testing of Computational Models of a Flapping Wing and a High Altitude Long Endurance Aircraft for High-fidelity Nonlinear Multidisciplinary Simulations PDF Author: Meir Messingher Lang
Publisher: Stanford University
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 90

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Book Description
In the present thesis numerical aeroelastic models are developed for a Flapping Wing System and a High Altitude Long Endurance Aircraft. Fluid and structural models are created separately. Conception and development of highly complex and detailed models for both systems are explained. Common to both models is the characteristic large displacements of their structural dynamic behavior. This raises the need for nonlinear considerations on the structural solver. For the fluid solver the Arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian formulation revealed to be not appropriate due to the lack of robustness under large deformations of the mesh. Hence, an Eulerian framework is used which showed to be successful in simulating the aeroelastic response of the systems. Numerical tests conducted separately on the fluid and structural models of each system are presented. These are done to study their character and check if their behavior seems physical since no corresponding experimental data is available. After successful tests, an aeroelastic simulation is performed for both systems, demonstrating the readability of the models for fluid-structure interaction analyses. Since the considered models tend to be large-scale, they require massive computational effort to be solved. Finally, a study on Reduced Order Modeling of an aeroelastic problem is performed; this as an attempt to find a way of reducing the resources required to analyze the contemplated systems.

Aeroelasticity and Fluid Structure Interaction Problems

Aeroelasticity and Fluid Structure Interaction Problems PDF Author: Peretz Friedmann
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 268

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Book Description


Modern Computational Aeroelasticity

Modern Computational Aeroelasticity PDF Author: Min Xu
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
ISBN: 3110576686
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 326

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Book Description
The book provides a state-of-art overview of computational methods for nonlinear aeroelasticity and load analysis, focusing on key techniques and fundamental principles for CFD/CSD coupling in temporal domain. CFD/CSD coupling software design and applications of CFD/CSD coupling techniques are discussed in detail as well. It is an essential reference for researchers and students in mechanics and applied mathematics.

Computational Modeling for Fluid Flow and Interfacial Transport

Computational Modeling for Fluid Flow and Interfacial Transport PDF Author: Wei Shyy
Publisher: Courier Corporation
ISBN: 0486150011
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 529

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Book Description
Practical applications and examples highlight this treatment of computational modeling for handling complex flowfields. A reference for researchers and graduate students of many different backgrounds, it also functions as a text for learning essential computation elements. Drawing upon his own research, the author addresses both macroscopic and microscopic features. He begins his three-part treatment with a survey of the basic concepts of finite difference schemes for solving parabolic, elliptic, and hyperbolic partial differential equations. The second part concerns issues related to computational modeling for fluid flow and transport phenomena. In addition to a focus on pressure-based methods, this section also discusses practical engineering applications. The third and final part explores the transport processes involving interfacial dynamics, particularly those influenced by phase change, gravity, and capillarity. Case studies, employing previously discussed methods, demonstrate the interplay between the fluid and thermal transport at macroscopic scales and their interaction with the interfacial transport.

A Modern Course in Aeroelasticity

A Modern Course in Aeroelasticity PDF Author: Howard C. Curtiss Jr.
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
ISBN: 9401578583
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 575

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Book Description
Areader who achieves a substantial command of the material con tained in this book should be able to read with understanding most of the literature in the field. Possible exceptions may be certain special aspects of the subject such as the aeroelasticity of plates and sheIls or the use of electronic feedback control to modify aeroelastic behavior. The first author has considered the former topic in aseparate volume. The latter topic is also deserving of aseparate volume. In the first portion of the book the basic physical phenomena of divergence, control surface eflectiveness, flutter and gust response of aeronautical vehicles are treated. As an indication of the expanding scope of the field, representative examples are also drawn from the non aeronautical literature. To aid the student who is encountering these phenomena for the first time, each is introduced in the context of a simple physical model and then reconsidered systematicaIly in more compli cated models using more sophisticated mathematics.

Numerical Simulation of the Aerodynamics of High-Lift Configurations

Numerical Simulation of the Aerodynamics of High-Lift Configurations PDF Author: Omar Darío López Mejia
Publisher: Springer
ISBN: 331962136X
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 118

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Book Description
This book deals with numerical simulations and computations of the turbulent flow around high-lift configurations commonly used in aircraft. It is devoted to the Computational Fluids Dynamics (CFD) method using full Navier-Stokes solvers typically used in the simulation of high-lift configuration. With the increase of computational resources in the aeronautical industry, the computation of complex flows such as the aerodynamics of high-lift configurations has become an active field not only in academic but also in industrial environments. The scope of the book includes applications and topics of interest related to the simulation of high-lift configurations such as: lift and drag prediction, unsteady aerodynamics, low Reynolds effects, high performance computing, turbulence modelling, flow feature visualization, among others. This book gives a description of the state-of-the-art of computational models for simulation of high-lift configurations. It also shows and discusses numerical results and validation of these computational models. Finally, this book is a good reference for graduate students and researchers interested in the field of simulation of high-lift configurations.