Abstract

Knowledge on the boundary-layer transition location at large chord Reynolds numbers (Re ≥ 3 million) is essential to evaluate the performance of airfoils designed for modern wind-turbine rotor blades, which rotor diameters can be of the order of hundred meters. In the present work, a temperature-sensitive paint (TSP) was used to systematically study boundary-layer transition on the suction side of a DU 91-W2-250 airfoil. The experiments were performed in the High-Pressure Wind Tunnel Gottingen at chord Reynolds numbers up to Re = 12 million and angles-of-attack from -14° to 20°. The coefficients of airfoil lift, drag, and pitching moment were also obtained after integration of the pressure distributions measured on the wind-tunnel model surface and in the model wake. The surface data obtained by means of TSP enabled not only to analyze the evolution of the transition location with varying angle-of-attack and chord Reynolds number, but also to provide an explanation for the evolution of the aerodynamic coefficients measured at stall and post-stall conditions. The stability of the laminar boundary layers investigated in the experiments was analyzed according to linear stability theory. The results of the stability computations supported the experimentally observed variations in the transition location. The amplification factors of boundary-layer disturbances at transition were also determined by correlating the experimental and numerical results.

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