Abstract:
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Active flow control methods have been widely studied for more than a decade in order to improve the airfoil's efficiency. This study is focused on fluidic actuation (the addition or subtraction of momentum to/from the boundary layer by blowing and/or sucking fluid). A synthetic jet is a very particular type of fluidic actuation that involves periodic blowing and suction with zero-net-mass-flow over a the full period. Its success as an active flow control device has been extensively reported by several authors. As it can be seen synthetic jet technology provides good results on boundary layer reattachment and therefore, an improvement on the airfoil's efficiency. What is more, is a generic system that can be widespread on multiple types of airfoils such as unmanned aerial vehicles and conventional airplanes airfoils. The effectiveness of control in mitigating boundary separation depends on a number of parameters related both to the flow itself and the control input such as: frequency and amplitude of the excitation, the excitation shape, exit diameter and cavity shape. Since the synthetic jet system has several degrees of freedom and the flux is unpredictable, multiple simulations have to be done in order to assess the best configuration to achieve the maximum airfoil's efficiency. The well-known excitation of the synthetic jet is the zero-net-mass-flow that combines both expulsion and suction periodically. In this study, we also evaluate other types of excitations that imply more or less energy into the system that is characterized with the momentum coefficient. The goal is to assess thoroughly this existent trade-off between the aerodynamics performance and the momentum coefficient. And finally, extract deep conclusions and assess the best synthetic jet configuration where the aerodynamics performances are improved with a low momentum coefficient.. To extract suitably conclusions we pass through a thorough and intricate process that starts with the adapted and generic discretized surface for the synthetic jet that we use to solve the Navier-Stokes equations, then the appropriate conversions to simulate with spectral element framework Nektar++ and finally the detailed extraction of results. Moreover, we adopt to this study a practical approach with an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV Skywalker x6) airfoil's photogrammetry that we use to simulate. |