Abstract
The current investigation focuses on the development of a low-cost computational methodology to design and optimize hovering rotors for small-scale vehicles using circular arc airfoils. Rotors for vehicles having a representative Re between 5000 and 60,000 were considered. A detailed experimental study of rectangular and tapered blades generated the data necessary to identify main performance trends and the effect of planform modifications. A blade element momentum theory model coupled with a table lookup scheme was implemented. The database was interpolated along three dimensions (Re, camber, and angle of attack) to obtain the local aerodynamic coefficients used in the calculation of the nonlinear inflow distribution along the blade span. Two methodologies were used in the calculation of the database. First, a purely numerical approach using the two-dimensional flow solver INS2D was evaluated. Second, a reverse method that used the experimental rotor data to refine the original previously generated database was investigated. Validation showed that the model predictive capabilities improved with the empirical corrections. An optimization algorithm was implemented to perform a grid search using power loading as the hover efficiency metric. The methodology proposed is able to optimize blade geometry and operating conditions following imposed constraints within a defined design space.
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