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Dynamic stall and three-dimensional wake effects on trim, stability and loads of hingeless rotors with fast Floquet theory

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Date Issued:
1995
Summary:
This dissertation investigates the effects of dynamic stall and three-dimensional wake on isolated-rotor trim, stability and loads. Trim analysis of predicting the pilot's control inputs and the corresponding periodic responses is based on periodic shooting with the fast Floquet theory and damped Newton iteration. Stability analysis, also based on the fast Floquet theory, predicts damping levels and frequencies. Loads analysis uses a force-integration approach to predict the rotating-blade root shears and moments as well as the hub forces and moments. The blades have flap bending, lag bending and torsion degrees of freedom. Dynamic stall is represented by the ONERA stall models of lift, drag and pitching moment, and the unsteady, nonuniform downwash is represented by a three-dimensional, finite-state wake model. Throughout, full blade-stall-wake dynamics is used in that all states are included from trim to stability to loads predictions. Moreover, these predictions are based on four aerodynamic theories--quasisteady linear theory, quasisteady stall theory, dynamic stall theory and dynamic stall and wake theory--and cover a broad range of system parameters such as thrust level, advance ratio, number of blades and blade torsional frequency. The investigation is conducted in three phases. In phase one, the elastic flap-lag-torsion equations are coupled with a finite-state wake model and with linear quasisteady airfoil aerodynamics. The investigation presents convergence characteristics of trim and stability with respect to the number of spatial azimuthal harmonics and radial shape functions in the wake representation. It includes a comprehensive parametric study over a broad range of system parameters. The investigation also includes correlation with the measured lag-damping data of a three-bladed isolated rotor operated untrimmed. In the correlation, three structural models of the root-flexure-blade assembly are used to demonstrate the strengths and the weaknesses of lag-damping predictions. Phase two includes dynamic stall in addition to three-dimensional wake to generate trim and stability results over a comprehensive range of system parameters. It addresses the degree of sophistication necessary in blade discretization and wake representation under dynamically stalled conditions. The convergence and parametric studies isolate the effects of wake, quasisteady stall and dynamic stall on trim and stability. Finally, phase three predicts the rotating blade loads and nonrotating hub loads; the predictions are based on the blade, wake and stall models used in the preceding trim and stability investigations. Although an accurate evaluation of loads requires a more refined blade description, the results isolate and demonstrate the principal dynamic stall and wake effects on the loads.
Title: Dynamic stall and three-dimensional wake effects on trim, stability and loads of hingeless rotors with fast Floquet theory.
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Name(s): Chunduru, Srinivas Jaya.
Florida Atlantic University, Degree grantor
Gaonkar, Gopal H., Thesis advisor
College of Engineering and Computer Science
Department of Ocean and Mechanical Engineering
Type of Resource: text
Genre: Electronic Thesis Or Dissertation
Issuance: monographic
Date Issued: 1995
Publisher: Florida Atlantic University
Place of Publication: Boca Raton, Fla.
Physical Form: application/pdf
Extent: 306 p.
Language(s): English
Summary: This dissertation investigates the effects of dynamic stall and three-dimensional wake on isolated-rotor trim, stability and loads. Trim analysis of predicting the pilot's control inputs and the corresponding periodic responses is based on periodic shooting with the fast Floquet theory and damped Newton iteration. Stability analysis, also based on the fast Floquet theory, predicts damping levels and frequencies. Loads analysis uses a force-integration approach to predict the rotating-blade root shears and moments as well as the hub forces and moments. The blades have flap bending, lag bending and torsion degrees of freedom. Dynamic stall is represented by the ONERA stall models of lift, drag and pitching moment, and the unsteady, nonuniform downwash is represented by a three-dimensional, finite-state wake model. Throughout, full blade-stall-wake dynamics is used in that all states are included from trim to stability to loads predictions. Moreover, these predictions are based on four aerodynamic theories--quasisteady linear theory, quasisteady stall theory, dynamic stall theory and dynamic stall and wake theory--and cover a broad range of system parameters such as thrust level, advance ratio, number of blades and blade torsional frequency. The investigation is conducted in three phases. In phase one, the elastic flap-lag-torsion equations are coupled with a finite-state wake model and with linear quasisteady airfoil aerodynamics. The investigation presents convergence characteristics of trim and stability with respect to the number of spatial azimuthal harmonics and radial shape functions in the wake representation. It includes a comprehensive parametric study over a broad range of system parameters. The investigation also includes correlation with the measured lag-damping data of a three-bladed isolated rotor operated untrimmed. In the correlation, three structural models of the root-flexure-blade assembly are used to demonstrate the strengths and the weaknesses of lag-damping predictions. Phase two includes dynamic stall in addition to three-dimensional wake to generate trim and stability results over a comprehensive range of system parameters. It addresses the degree of sophistication necessary in blade discretization and wake representation under dynamically stalled conditions. The convergence and parametric studies isolate the effects of wake, quasisteady stall and dynamic stall on trim and stability. Finally, phase three predicts the rotating blade loads and nonrotating hub loads; the predictions are based on the blade, wake and stall models used in the preceding trim and stability investigations. Although an accurate evaluation of loads requires a more refined blade description, the results isolate and demonstrate the principal dynamic stall and wake effects on the loads.
Identifier: 12426 (digitool), FADT12426 (IID), fau:9321 (fedora)
Collection: FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
Note(s): College of Engineering and Computer Science
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 1995.
Subject(s): Floquet theory
Helicopters
Rotors (Helicopters)
Vibration (Aeronautics)
Held by: Florida Atlantic University Libraries
Persistent Link to This Record: http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/12426
Sublocation: Digital Library
Use and Reproduction: Copyright © is held by the author, with permission granted to Florida Atlantic University to digitize, archive and distribute this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
Use and Reproduction: http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Host Institution: FAU
Is Part of Series: Florida Atlantic University Digital Library Collections.