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Flight Tests of a Supersonic Natural Laminar Flow AirfoilIR thermography was used to characterize the transition front on a S-NLF test article at chord Reynolds numbers in excess of 30 million Changes in transition due to Mach number, Reynolds number, and surface roughness were investigated - Regions of laminar flow in excess of 80% chord at chord Reynolds numbers greater than 14 million IR thermography clearly showed the transition front and other flow features such as shock waves impinging upon the surface A series of parallel oblique shocks, of yet unknown origin, were found to cause premature transition at higher Reynolds numbers. NASA has a current goal to eliminate barriers to the development of practical supersonic transport aircraft Drag reduction through the use of supersonic natural laminar flow (S-NLF) is currently being explored as a means of increasing aerodynamic efficiency - Tradeoffs work best for business jet class at M<2 Conventional high-speed designs minimize inviscid drag at the expense of viscous drag - Existence of strong spanwise pressure gradient leads to crossflow (CF) while adverse chordwise pressure gradients amplifies and Tollmien-Schlichting (TS) instabilities Aerion Corporation has patented a S-NLF wing design (US Patent No. 5322242) - Low sweep to control CF - dp/dx < 0 on both wing surfaces to stabilize TS - Thin wing with sharp leading edge to minimize wave drag increase due to reduction in sweep NASA and Aerion have partnered to study S-NLF since 1999 Series of S-NLF experiments flown on the NASA F-15B research test bed airplane Infrared (IR) thermography used to characterize transition - Non-intrusive, global, good spatial resolution - Captures significant flow features well
Document ID
20140010358
Acquisition Source
Armstrong Flight Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Frederick, Mike
(NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center Edwards, CA, United States)
Banks, Dan
(NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center Edwards, CA, United States)
Garzon, Andres
(Aerion Corp. Reno, NV, United States)
Matisheck, Jason
(Aerion Corp. Reno, NV, United States)
Date Acquired
July 31, 2014
Publication Date
June 24, 2014
Subject Category
Aerodynamics
Fluid Mechanics And Thermodynamics
Report/Patent Number
AFRC-E-DAA-TN14871
Report Number: AFRC-E-DAA-TN14871
Meeting Information
Meeting: International Symposium on Flow Visualization
Location: Okinawa
Country: Japan
Start Date: June 24, 2014
End Date: June 28, 2014
Sponsors: Visualization Society of Japan
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
laminar flow
boundary layer transition
supersonic boundary layer
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