Conventional propellers operating at negative thrust conditions, even at 0 deg angle of attack, are characterized by flow separation and significantly different noise emissions than at positive thrust conditions. Operating the propeller at nonzero angles of attack at negative thrust conditions can further impact aerodynamic performance and far-field noise emission. This paper studies these effects using lattice-Boltzmann very large eddy simulations coupled with the Ffowcs Williams and Hawkings analogy. At positive thrust, operation at 10 deg angle of attack increases thrust along the freestream direction by approximately 3% compared to operation at 0 deg angle of attack, while efficiency remains constant. Conversely, the negative thrust condition shows approximately a 7% decrease in thrust magnitude and a 10% reduction in regenerated power. In this condition, the positively cambered blade sections exhibit dynamic stall, resulting in broadband fluctuations of up to 10% of the mean loading near the blade tip. The nonzero angle of attack induces opposite variations in absolute blade loading between positive and negative thrust conditions, resulting in opposite changes in the noise directivity. At positive thrust, noise increases in the region from which the propeller is tilted away (i.e., below the propeller at a positive angle of attack), while the opposite occurs at negative thrust. The varying blade loading over the azimuth results in destructive interference between loading and thickness noise for the negative thrust case at the 10 deg angle of attack. These findings highlight the crucial role of considering nonzero angles of attack in propeller design and optimization analyses.
Effect of Angle of Attack on Propeller Aeroacoustics at Positive and Negative Thrust / Goyal, Jatinder; Sinnige, Tomas; Ferreira, Carlos; Avallone, Francesco. - In: AIAA JOURNAL. - ISSN 1533-385X. - (In corso di stampa). [10.2514/1.C038073]
Effect of Angle of Attack on Propeller Aeroacoustics at Positive and Negative Thrust
Avallone, Francesco
In corso di stampa
Abstract
Conventional propellers operating at negative thrust conditions, even at 0 deg angle of attack, are characterized by flow separation and significantly different noise emissions than at positive thrust conditions. Operating the propeller at nonzero angles of attack at negative thrust conditions can further impact aerodynamic performance and far-field noise emission. This paper studies these effects using lattice-Boltzmann very large eddy simulations coupled with the Ffowcs Williams and Hawkings analogy. At positive thrust, operation at 10 deg angle of attack increases thrust along the freestream direction by approximately 3% compared to operation at 0 deg angle of attack, while efficiency remains constant. Conversely, the negative thrust condition shows approximately a 7% decrease in thrust magnitude and a 10% reduction in regenerated power. In this condition, the positively cambered blade sections exhibit dynamic stall, resulting in broadband fluctuations of up to 10% of the mean loading near the blade tip. The nonzero angle of attack induces opposite variations in absolute blade loading between positive and negative thrust conditions, resulting in opposite changes in the noise directivity. At positive thrust, noise increases in the region from which the propeller is tilted away (i.e., below the propeller at a positive angle of attack), while the opposite occurs at negative thrust. The varying blade loading over the azimuth results in destructive interference between loading and thickness noise for the negative thrust case at the 10 deg angle of attack. These findings highlight the crucial role of considering nonzero angles of attack in propeller design and optimization analyses.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2998192
