Abstract

Recently, an asymmetric lift-offset compound helicopter has been conceptualized at the University of Maryland with the objective of improving the overall performance of a medium-lift utility helicopter. The investigated form of lift-compounding incorporates an additional stubbed wing attached to the fuselage on the retreating side. This design alleviates rotor lift requirements and generates a roll moment that enables increased thrust potential on the advancing side in high-speed forward flight. In this study, a numerical model was developed based on the corresponding experimental test case. Threedimensional unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations were solved on overset grids with computational fluid dynamics–computational structural dynamics (CFD–CSD) coupling using the in-house CPU–GPU heterogeneous Mercury CFD framework. Simulations were performed at high-speed, high-thrust operating conditions and showed satisfactory agreement with the experimental measurements in terms of the cyclic control angles, rotor thrust, and torque values. CFD results indicated that for an advance ratio of 0.5 with a collective pitch of 10.6°, a vehicle lift-to-equivalent-drag ratio improvement of 47% was attainable using 11% wing-lift offset. The CFD-computed flow fields provide insights into the origin of a reverse flow entry vortex that was observed in particle image velocimetry data, and they characterize the wing–rotor interactional aerodynamics.

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