Artículos de revistas
Macro-Fiber Composite Actuators for Flow Control of a Variable Camber Airfoil
Fecha
2011Registro en:
JOURNAL OF INTELLIGENT MATERIAL SYSTEMS AND STRUCTURES, v.22, n.1, p.81-91, 2011
1045-389X
10.1177/1045389X10392613
Autor
BILGEN, Onur
MARQUI JUNIOR, Carlos de
KOCHERSBERGER, Kevin B.
INMAN, Daniel J.
Institución
Resumen
This research employs solid-state actuators for delay of flow separation seen in airfoils at low Reynolds numbers. The flow control technique investigated here is aimed for a variable camber airfoil that employs two active surfaces and a single four-bar (box) mechanism as the internal structure. To reduce separation, periodic excitation to the flow around the leading edge of the airfoil is induced by a total of nine piezocomposite actuated clamped-free unimorph benders distributed in the spanwise direction. An electromechanical model is employed to design an actuator capable of high deformations at the desired frequency for lift improvement at post-stall angles. The optimum spanwise distribution of excitation for increasing lift coefficient is identified experimentally in the wind tunnel. A 3D (non-uniform) excitation distribution achieved higher lift enhancement in the post-stall region with lower power consumption when compared to the 2D (uniform) excitation distribution. A lift coefficient increase of 18.4% is achieved with the identified non-uniform excitation mode at the bender resonance frequency of 125 Hz, the flow velocity of 5 m/s and at the reduced frequency of 3.78. The maximum lift (Clmax) is increased 5.2% from the baseline. The total power consumption of the flow control technique is 639 mW(RMS).