Abstract
FLOW visualization and near-surface hot-wire experiments were performed in the U.S.A.F Academy Aeronautics Laboratory subsonic wind tunnel on an airfoil undergoing large-amplitude pitching motions about its quarter chord. The experiments were conducted using a NACA 0015 airfoil at an airfoil Reynolds number of 45,000. Two cases are presented in which the angular pitching rate a is maintained constant during the motion. These two cases represent two different nondimensional pitching rates a+, where ot+ is equal to 6; nondimensionalized by the chord c and the freestream velocity U^ (a + ^ac/U^). Data for the two cases where values of a+ are equal to 0.2 and 0.6 show the dramatic effect of pitch rate on flow structure. Largescale vortical structures are seen in both cases at high angles of attack but appear much later and are of a different form for the case with the larger a+ value. These structures are very energetic, producing reverse flow velocities near the airfoil surface of 1.0-2.1 times the freestream velocity.
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