TY - GEN
T1 - A high-precision CFD method to predict dynamic derivatives
AU - Geng, Shuo
AU - Song, Wenping
AU - Liu, Chengpeng
AU - Han, Shaoqiang
AU - Han, Zhonghua
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 15th Asia-Pacific International Symposium on Aerospace Technology, APISAT 2024. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Dynamic derivatives are key aerodynamic parameters that significantly influence the flight stability and maneuverability of flying vehicles, making them crucial in design of flight control systems. With advances in CFD technology, dynamic derivatives are commonly determined through numerical simulation methods. However, traditional low-order schemes often fail to ensure the necessary prediction accuracy, highlighting the need for improvement in this area. This paper develops a high-precision numerical method for predicting dynamic derivatives for flying vehicles. The method simulates forced oscillatory unsteady flow by using a RANS equation solver enclosed by the S-A turbulence model, discretized by the fifth-order WENO-K scheme on a structured chimera grid. Dynamic derivatives are then identified through the integral method. To verify the reliability of the developed method, the pitching damping derivative for the U.S. Army-Navy Basic Finner missile is calculated across subsonic, transonic, and supersonic regimes and compared with free-flight test data. The computational results show good agreement with the test data. For a typical state of Ma=0.9, Re=6.3×105, the relative errors in the pitching damping derivative, compared to a second-order scheme from two references, are reduced from 10.3% and 5.1% to 0.49%, demonstrating the method's significant improvement in prediction accuracy. This method holds substantial value for flight quality analysis and the design of flight control systems for aircrafts.
AB - Dynamic derivatives are key aerodynamic parameters that significantly influence the flight stability and maneuverability of flying vehicles, making them crucial in design of flight control systems. With advances in CFD technology, dynamic derivatives are commonly determined through numerical simulation methods. However, traditional low-order schemes often fail to ensure the necessary prediction accuracy, highlighting the need for improvement in this area. This paper develops a high-precision numerical method for predicting dynamic derivatives for flying vehicles. The method simulates forced oscillatory unsteady flow by using a RANS equation solver enclosed by the S-A turbulence model, discretized by the fifth-order WENO-K scheme on a structured chimera grid. Dynamic derivatives are then identified through the integral method. To verify the reliability of the developed method, the pitching damping derivative for the U.S. Army-Navy Basic Finner missile is calculated across subsonic, transonic, and supersonic regimes and compared with free-flight test data. The computational results show good agreement with the test data. For a typical state of Ma=0.9, Re=6.3×105, the relative errors in the pitching damping derivative, compared to a second-order scheme from two references, are reduced from 10.3% and 5.1% to 0.49%, demonstrating the method's significant improvement in prediction accuracy. This method holds substantial value for flight quality analysis and the design of flight control systems for aircrafts.
KW - CFD
KW - dynamic derivatives
KW - fifth-order WENO-K scheme
KW - high precision
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105015048170
M3 - 会议稿件
AN - SCOPUS:105015048170
T3 - 15th Asia-Pacific International Symposium on Aerospace Technology, APISAT 2024
SP - 1738
EP - 1747
BT - 15th Asia-Pacific International Symposium on Aerospace Technology, APISAT 2024
PB - Engineers Australia
T2 - 15th Asia-Pacific International Symposium on Aerospace Technology, APISAT 2024
Y2 - 28 October 2024 through 30 October 2024
ER -