Experimental Evaluation of Sinusoidal Leading Edges

P REVIOUS studies on increasing airfoil lift and improving stall characteristics have addressed various passive and active approaches to modifying the leading and trailing edge shapes. The passive approaches have covered such methods as rippling the trailing edge, applying serrated-edge Gurney flaps, or modifying the leading-edge (LE) profile [1,2]. Other efforts have effectively eliminated the dynamic stall of an NACA 0012 airfoil by perturbing the LE contour as little as 0.5–0.9%of the chord [3]. Levshin et al. [4] demonstrated that sinusoidal LE planforms on an NACA 63-021 airfoil section decreased maximum lift, but extended the stall angle by almost 9 deg. The larger amplitude sinusoids created “softer” stall characteristics by maintaining attached flow at the peaks despite separated flow in the troughs. These tests were performed to simulate the effects of LE tubercles on humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) flippers. Prior work by the authors also reported wind tunnel measurements for idealized scale models of humpback whale flippers [5]. One model had a smooth leading edge and a secondmodel had sinusoidal bumps (tubercles) along the leading edge for the outer 2 3 of the span. It was found that the addition of tubercles to a 3-D idealized flipper increased the maximum lift coefficient while reducing the drag coefficient over a portion of the operational envelope. It is thought that the tubercles on the flipper leading-edge enhance the whale’s ability to maneuver to catch prey [6]. Though the work to date regarding sinusoidal or serrated leading-edge planforms is largely motivated by marine mammal locomotion, the effects of extending the stall point for lifting surfaces at similar Reynolds numbers (Re) may have application to small-UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) design and the inevitable laminar stall problems [7]. However other relevant applications might benefit from the effects of simulated tubercles such as stall alleviation/separation control on sailboat centerboards or wind turbines, where an expanded operating envelope could improve the overall effectiveness of the blade [8,9]. In the present work, a better understanding is sought of the mechanism of the improvements measured in previous experiments, with a greater applicability in mind. The authors seek to determine whether the performance improvements resulted from enhancements to the sectional characteristics of wings with tubercles (i.e., essentially 2-D effects), or from Reynolds number effects on a tapered planform, or from other 3-D effects such as spanwise stall progression.