Sign in to use this feature.

Years

Between: -

Subjects

remove_circle_outline

Journals

Article Types

Countries / Regions

Search Results (2)

Search Parameters:
Keywords = unsteady aircraft icing

Order results
Result details
Results per page
Select all
Export citation of selected articles as:
26 pages, 9341 KiB  
Article
A Preliminary Approach towards Rotor Icing Modeling Using the Unsteady Vortex Lattice Method
by Abdallah Samad, Eric Villeneuve, François Morency, Mathieu Béland and Maxime Lapalme
Drones 2024, 8(2), 65; https://doi.org/10.3390/drones8020065 - 15 Feb 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2293
Abstract
UAV rotors are at a high risk of ice accumulation during their operations in icing conditions. Thermal ice protection systems (IPSs) are being employed as a means of protecting rotor blades from ice, yet designing the appropriate IPS with the required heating density [...] Read more.
UAV rotors are at a high risk of ice accumulation during their operations in icing conditions. Thermal ice protection systems (IPSs) are being employed as a means of protecting rotor blades from ice, yet designing the appropriate IPS with the required heating density remains a challenge. In this work, a reduced-order modeling technique based on the Unsteady Vortex Lattice Method (UVLM) is proposed as a way to predicting rotor icing and to calculate the required anti-icing heat loads. The UVLM is gaining recent popularity for aircraft and rotor modeling. This method is flexible enough to model difficult aerodynamic problems, computationally efficient compared to higher-order CFD methods and accurate enough for conceptual design problems. A previously developed implementation of the UVLM for 3D rotor aerodynamic modeling is extended to incorporate a simplified steady-state icing thermodynamic model on the stagnation line of the blade. A viscous coupling algorithm based on a modified α-method incorporates viscous data into the originally inviscid calculations of the UVLM. The algorithm also predicts the effective angle of attack at each blade radial station (r/R), which is, in turn, used to calculate the convective heat transfer for each r/R using a CFD-based correlation for airfoils. The droplet collection efficiency at the stagnation line is calculated using a popular correlation from the literature. The icing mass and heat transfer balance includes terms for evaporation, sublimation, radiation, convection, water impingement, kinetic heating, and aerodynamic heating, as well as an anti-icing heat flux. The proposed UVLM-icing coupling technique is tested by replicating the experimental results for ice accretion and anti-icing of the 4-blade rotor of the APT70 drone. Aerodynamic predictions of the UVLM for the Figure of Merit, thrust, and torque coefficients agree within 10% of the experimental measurements. For icing conditions at −5 °C, the proposed approach overestimates the required anti-icing flux by around 50%, although it sufficiently predicts the effect of aerodynamic heating on the lack of ice formation near the blade tips. At −12 °C, visualizations of ice formation at different anti-icing heating powers agree well with UVLM predictions. However, a large discrepancy was found when predicting the required anti-icing heat load. Discrepancies between the numerical and experimental data are largely owed to the unaccounted transient and 3D effects related to the icing process on the rotating blades, which have been planned for in future work. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

24 pages, 2252 KiB  
Article
An Unsteady Model for Aircraft Icing Based on Tightly-Coupled Method and Phase-Field Method
by Hao Dai, Chengxiang Zhu, Ning Zhao, Chunling Zhu and Yufei Cai
Aerospace 2021, 8(12), 373; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace8120373 - 1 Dec 2021
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 3291
Abstract
An unsteady tightly-coupled icing model is established in this paper to solve the numerical simulation problem of unsteady aircraft icing. The multi-media fluid of air and droplets is regarded as a single medium fluid with variable material properties. Taking the droplet concentration as [...] Read more.
An unsteady tightly-coupled icing model is established in this paper to solve the numerical simulation problem of unsteady aircraft icing. The multi-media fluid of air and droplets is regarded as a single medium fluid with variable material properties. Taking the droplet concentration as the phase parameter and the droplet resistance coefficient as the interphase force, the mass concentration distribution of the droplet is obtained by solving the Cahn–Hilliard equation. Fick’s law is introduced to improve the Cahn–Hilliard equation to predict the droplet shadow zone. On this basis, the procedure of the unsteady numerical simulation method for aircraft icing is established, including grid generation, the dual-time-step method to realize the unsteady calculation of the air and droplet tightly-coupled mixed flow field, and the improved shallow water icing model. Finally, through the comparative analysis of numerical examples, the effectiveness of the new model in predicting the droplet impact characteristics and the droplet shadow zone are verified. Compared with other icing models, the ice shapes predicted by the unsteady tightly-coupled model were found to be the most consistent with the experiments. In the icing comparison conditions in this manuscript, the prediction accuracy of the ice thickness at the stagnation point of the leading edge was up to 35% higher than that of LEWICE. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Aeronautics)
Show Figures

Figure 1

Back to TopTop