Abstract

The demand for high-efficiency air vehicles and the development of distributed electric propulsion systems for aircraft are exposing the need for accurate aerodynamic prediction of multiple integrated propulsion systems. Conventional high-fidelity computational methods are too expensive, and low-cost low-fidelity methods make too many aerodynamic assumptions to be applied to these analyses. Dual-solver hybrid computational fluid dynamics (CFD) methods bridge the gap between these two categories of solvers, but many lack capabilities that are needed for complex vehicles. Recent improvements to the hybrid solver OVERFLOW-CHARM provide efficient and accurate analysis of integrated propulsion systems with hybrid CFD methods, as demonstrated on the wing–propeller system of the AIAA Workshop for Integrated Propeller Prediction. Predictions of propeller thrust are within 1% of conventional CFD data, and wing pressure coefficient distributions agree well with both experimental data and conventional CFD methods. The dual-solver results were obtained at half the computational cost of the full CFD simulation.

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