Abstract

Unsteady pressure-sensitive paint (PSP) measurements were acquired on an articulated model helicopter rotor of 0.26 m diameter in edgewise flow to simulate forward flight conditions. The rotor was operated at advance ratios (free stream velocity normalized by hover tip speed) of 0.15 and 0.30 at a cycle-averaged tip chord Reynolds number of 1.1 × 105, with collective and longitudinal cyclic pitch inputs of 10° and 2.5°, respectively. A single-shot data acquisition technique allowed a camera to record the paint luminescence after a single pulse of high-energy laser excitation, yielding sufficient signal-to-noise ratio to avoid image averaging. Platinum tetra(pentafluorophenyl) porphyrin (PtTFPP) in a porous polymer/ceramic binder served as the PSP. To address errors caused by image blurring and temperature sensitivity, a previously reported motion deblurring algorithm was implemented and the temperature correction was made using temperature-sensitive paint measurements on a second rotor blade. Instantaneous, unsteady surface pressure maps at a rotation rate of 82 Hz captured different aerodynamic responses between the two sides of the rotor disk and were compared to the nominally steady hover case. Cycle-to-cycle variations in tip unsteadiness on the retreating blade were also observed, causing oblique pressure features which may be linked to three-dimensional stall.

Highlights

  • The main rotor blades of a helicopter in forward flight encounter time-varying pressure changes imposed by the difference in relative flow velocity between the advancing and retreating sides of the disk

  • Unsteady pressure-sensitive paint (PSP) measurements were acquired on an articulated model helicopter rotor of 0.26 m diameter in edgewise flow to simulate forward flight conditions

  • Platinum tetra(pentafluorophenyl) porphyrin (PtTFPP) in a porous polymer/ ceramic binder served as the PSP

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Summary

Introduction

The main rotor blades of a helicopter in forward flight encounter time-varying pressure changes imposed by the difference in relative flow velocity between the advancing and retreating sides of the disk. Lifetime-based PSP data acquisition is predicated upon the pressure sensitivity of the temporal decay of luminescence (with characteristic lifetime s) resulting from pulsed excitation This approach differs from intensity-based methods where the light source is flashed for each wind-off and wind-on image (Liu and Sullivan 2005); instead, the reference information is obtained from the same wind-on condition as the pressure information. Disotell and Gregory (2011) observed superimposed wave-like structures in the acoustic field of a resonance cavity operating at high sound pressure levels using the single-shot PSP technique This property is desirable for helicopter flows, where dynamic stall and tip vortex. Wong et al (2012) and Watkins et al (2012) utilized the single-shot lifetime technique to acquire unsteady PSP measurements near the tip of a scale helicopter blade in simulated forward flight at an advance ratio of 0.35. A complementary ACcoupled view of differential pressure changes measured by the PSP highlights cycle-to-cycle variations in pressure at the tip of the retreating blade

Equipment
Experimental apparatus
Helicopter model
Paint characteristics
Pressure-sensitive paint
Temperature-sensitive paint
Data acquisition and processing
Deblurring filter
Image registration
Temperature correction
In situ shift
Spatial filtering
Uncertainty
Results and discussion
Hover case
Advancing and retreating blades in forward flight
Transient pressure variations
Concluding remarks

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