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Airfoil

About: Airfoil is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 24696 publications have been published within this topic receiving 337709 citations. The topic is also known as: aerofoil & wing section.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a comparative study of weakly compressible (WCSPH) and incompressible (ISPH) smoothed particle hydrodynamics methods by providing numerical solutions for fluid flows over an airfoil and a square obstacle is presented.
Abstract: This paper presents a comparative study for the weakly compressible (WCSPH) and incompressible (ISPH) smoothed particle hydrodynamics methods by providing numerical solutions for fluid flows over an airfoil and a square obstacle. Improved WCSPH and ISPH techniques are used to solve these two bluff body flow problems. It is shown that both approaches can handle complex geometries using the multiple boundary tangents (MBT) method, and eliminate particle clustering-induced instabilities with the implementation of a particle fracture repair procedure as well as the corrected SPH discretization scheme. WCSPH and ISPH simulation results are compared and validated with those of a finite element method (FEM). The quantitative comparisons of WCSPH, ISPH and FEM results in terms of Strouhal number for the square obstacle test case, and the pressure envelope, surface traction forces, and velocity gradients on the airfoil boundaries as well as the lift and drag values for the airfoil geometry indicate that the WCSPH method with the suggested implementation produces numerical results as accurate and reliable as those of the ISPH and FEM methods.

164 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a reduced-order nonlinear unsteady aerodynamic modeling approach suitable for analyzing pitching/plunging airfoils subject to fixed or time-varying freestream Mach numbers is described.
Abstract: A reduced-order nonlinear unsteady aerodynamic modeling approach suitable for analyzing pitching/plunging airfoils subject to fixed or time-varying freestream Mach numbers is described. The reduced-order model uses kriging surrogates to account for flow nonlinearities and recurrence solutions to account for time-history effects associated with unsteadiness. The resulting surrogate-based recurrence framework generates time-domain predictionsofunsteadylift,moment,anddragthataccuratelyapproximate computational fluiddynamicssolutions, but at a fraction of the computational cost. Results corresponding to transonic conditions demonstrate that the surrogate-based recurrence framework can mimic computational fluid dynamics predictions of unsteady aerodynamic responses when flow nonlinearities are present. For an unsteady aerodynamic modeling problem considered in this study, an accurate reduced-order model was generated by the surrogate-based recurrence framework approach with significantly fewer computational fluid dynamics evaluations compared to results reported in the literature for a similar problem in which a proper-orthogonal-decomposition-based approach was applied. Furthermore, the results show that the surrogate-based approach can accurately model time-varying freestream Mach number effects and is therefore applicable to rotary-wing applications in addition to fixed-wing applications.

163 citations

Patent
29 Jul 2003
TL;DR: In this paper, the inner helical half wing blades, being somewhat shorter than the length of the outer airfoil blades, act to regularize the swirling wind regime flowing through the hybrid wind turbine.
Abstract: A hybrid blade wind turbine device formed of at least a pair of straight outer airfoil blades, and a pair of inner helical wing blades, as supported for rotation within a safety protective cage structure, which wind turbine can be mounted in the vertical, horizontal, or other aligned operational positions. The inner helical half wing blades, being preferably somewhat shorter than the length of the outer airfoil blades, act to “regularize” the swirling wind regime flowing through the hybrid wind turbine, so as to maximize the efficiency of the outer airfoil blades. The helical half wing blades can be formed of individual segmented vane segments to provide improved operational capabilities for the overall hybrid wind turbine. To best harness annualized available wind conditions, the hybrid wind turbine can be customized, through modification of the number of vane segments, the selection of the specific shape of the outer airfoil blades, and the specific operational positioning of the outer airfoil blades. Alternatively, the helical half wing blades can be formed as generally smooth-walled blades.

163 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the formation of the primary dynamic stall vortex was identified as the growth of a recirculation region and the ensuing instability of the associated shear layer, and the stall development can be subdivided into two stages of primary and secondary instability with the latter being the effective vortex formation stage.
Abstract: Dynamic stall on an oscillating airfoil was investigated by a combination of surface pressure measurements and time-resolved particle image velocimetry. Following up on previous work on the onset of dynamic stall (Mulleners and Raffel in Exp Fluids 52(3):779–793, 2012), we combined time-resolved imaging with an extensive coherent structure analysis to study various aspects of stall development. The formation of the primary dynamic stall vortex was identified as the growth of a recirculation region and the ensuing instability of the associated shear layer. The stall development can be subdivided into two stages of primary and secondary instability with the latter being the effective vortex formation stage. The characteristic time scales associated with the primary instability stage revealed an overall decrease in dynamic stall delay with increasing effective unsteadiness of the pitching airfoil. The vortex formation stage was found to be largely unaffected by variations of the airfoil’s dynamics.

163 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231,083
20221,871
2021923
2020979
20191,097
20181,002