Abstract

This paper presents a numerical simulation of the external and engine inlet flows for the F-18 aircraft at typical high-angle-of-attack flight conditions. Two engine inlet mass flow rates, corresponding to flight idle and maximum power, were computed. This was accomplished using a structured, overset grid technique to couple the external and internal grid systems. Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes solutions were obtained using an implicit, finite-differencing scheme. Results show a strong coupling of the external and engine inlet flows, especially at the maximum power setting. Increasing the mass flow rate through the inlet caused the primary vortex breakdown location to move downstream. This trend is also observed in flight tests performed on the F-18. A reversed flow region upstream of the inlet duct is visible in the faired-inlet and flight-idle computations. This flow reversal is not present in the maximum power setting computation. These large-scale changes in flow structure highlight the importance of simulating inlet conditions in high-angle-of-attack aircraft computations.

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