This work investigates the unsteady aerodynamic interaction that arises from the impingement of a propeller slipstream on a wing. To this end, an innovative measuring device for unsteady pressure is deployed, comprising a flexible printed circuit board sleeve embedded with MEMS pressure sensors and microphones. The device performance is validated against conventional measurement techniques. The wing is a benchmarked NACA 633018 airfoil-based model, and the propeller is the TUD-XPROP-S. In addition to pressure measurements, oil flow visualizations are performed to elucidate the flow pattern on the wing when the propeller operates at advance ratios of 0.8 and 1.8, and nominal blade pitch angles of 30° and 45°. The measurements reveal the formation of a laminar separation bubble on the portion of the wing not washed by the propeller slipstream. The flow is seen to remain attached on the advancing blade side, at least for the tested angles of attack. The microphone measurements capture the trace of the propeller’s tip vortices over the wing and the deformation of the slipstream over the wing. This work serves a dual purpose. Firstly, presenting an innovative measuring device for unsteady pressure, as the sensor-embedded sleeve requires minimal installation efforts and allows for a comprehensive measurement of the unsteady surface pressure field. Secondly, discussing the complex spatio temporal interaction that is formed from the impingement of a propeller slipstream onto a wing.

Unsteady surface pressure measurements of propeller-wing interaction with a MEMS-embedded sleeve / Comunian, P.; Cafiero, G.; Serpieri, J.; Avallone, F.; Zamponi, R.; Ragni, D.; Sinnige, T.. - In: AEROSPACE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 1270-9638. - (2026). [10.1016/j.ast.2026.111980]

Unsteady surface pressure measurements of propeller-wing interaction with a MEMS-embedded sleeve

Comunian, P.;Cafiero, G.;Serpieri, J.;Avallone, F.;Ragni, D.;
2026

Abstract

This work investigates the unsteady aerodynamic interaction that arises from the impingement of a propeller slipstream on a wing. To this end, an innovative measuring device for unsteady pressure is deployed, comprising a flexible printed circuit board sleeve embedded with MEMS pressure sensors and microphones. The device performance is validated against conventional measurement techniques. The wing is a benchmarked NACA 633018 airfoil-based model, and the propeller is the TUD-XPROP-S. In addition to pressure measurements, oil flow visualizations are performed to elucidate the flow pattern on the wing when the propeller operates at advance ratios of 0.8 and 1.8, and nominal blade pitch angles of 30° and 45°. The measurements reveal the formation of a laminar separation bubble on the portion of the wing not washed by the propeller slipstream. The flow is seen to remain attached on the advancing blade side, at least for the tested angles of attack. The microphone measurements capture the trace of the propeller’s tip vortices over the wing and the deformation of the slipstream over the wing. This work serves a dual purpose. Firstly, presenting an innovative measuring device for unsteady pressure, as the sensor-embedded sleeve requires minimal installation efforts and allows for a comprehensive measurement of the unsteady surface pressure field. Secondly, discussing the complex spatio temporal interaction that is formed from the impingement of a propeller slipstream onto a wing.
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
1-s2.0-S1270963826003603-main.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: 2. Post-print / Author's Accepted Manuscript
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 89.57 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
89.57 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11583/3008045