Abstract

This paper presents unsteady stall characteristics of a Slingsby T67M260 Firefly light aircraft from both a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) half model and flight tests. Initial results from the steady CFD, based on a RANS k−ω SST turbulence model, established the critical angle of attack of the stall to be αstall=16∘, with a maximum lift coefficient of CLmax=1.2. Comparisons with straight and level flight test data were comparable up to α=12∘ – 14∘, with the increasing deviation at higher α attributed to the effect of the propeller slipstream under these flight conditions. The RANS CFD model was then extended to an unsteady Detached-Eddy Simulation (DES) model for three angles of attack at pre-stall and stall condition (α=14∘, 16∘, 18∘), with analysis of the vortex shedding frequency. Further comparisons were then made with flight test data taken using on-board accelerometers and wing tuft surface flow visualization, at a stalled condition at equivalent α. These unsteady CFD data established a dominant shedding frequency ranging from 11.7 Hz – 8.74 Hz with increasing α and a Strouhal number based on wing chord of St = 0.11, which when compared to flight test accelerometer spectra matched within 2.9% of the measured frequency.

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