Active Flow Control on the Stingray Uninhabited Air Vehicle: Transient Behaviour

The application of leading-edge separation control on an uninhabited air vehicle (UAV) with 50-deg leading-edge sweep is investigated experimentally in a full-scale close-return wind tunnel using arrays of synthetic jet actuators. Active flow control is used to enhance vehicle control at moderate and high angles of attack for takeoff and landing activities or gust load alleviation. The surface-mounted synthetic jet actuators are operated in various waveforms where the carrier frequency is at least an order of magnitude higher than the characteristic shedding frequency of the UAV. Actuation yields a suction peak near the leading edge, however, while excitation with a sinusoidal waveform results in a sharp suction peak near the leading edge; pulse modulation yields a larger and wider suction peak. The flow transients associated with controlled reattachment and separation of the flow over the UAV are investigated using amplitude modulation of the actuation waveform by measuring the dynamic surface pressure at different locations on the upper surface of the UAV’s wing. Phase-locked measurements show that the transients, associated with the onset of reattachment and separation, at high angles of attack are accompanied by the shedding of large-scale vortical structures and oscillations of the surface pressure. However, no oscillations are observed when the baseline flow is attached.

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