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Published June 27, 2023 | public
Journal Article

Effect of Leading-Edge Cranks on Stability and Control of Active-Flow-Control-Enabled Tailless Aircraft

Abstract

The Swept Wing Flow Test (SWIFT) is a tailless unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) model to be tested at high Reynolds numbers in NASA's National Transonic Facility. The model is designed around a [Formula: see text]-shaped wing with a single, large crank at its leading edge (LE). It suffers from an unstable nose-up pitch departure resulting from flow separation augmented by the LE crank. A small-scale, modular wind tunnel model ([Formula: see text]) was built that allowed for changes in the crank angle by increasing the outboard wing sweep. Eliminating the crank entirely increased the [Formula: see text] and changed the sign of pitch departure, thus exposing the significance of the LE crank. The model was equipped with sweeping jet actuators that could be individually enabled by valves located at the actuator inlets, allowing one to explore the role of active flow control (AFC) in expanding the model's longitudinal stability margins and controlling its yaw while being cognizant of the coupling between changes in the model's planform and their effect on AFC. Test results indicated that selective actuation depending on the model's attitude modified the flow and dramatically increased the trimmed [Formula: see text], while further suggesting that the actuation should dynamically change with incidence to improve AFC efficacy.

Additional Information

© 2023 by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. The design of the active-flow-control-augmented Swept Wing Flow Test (SWIFT) model, its construction, and the tests on the original cranked leading-edge model (CLEM) carried out at Caltech between April 8, 2021, and June 16, 2021, were sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) CRANE "phase 0" program managed by A. Walan. The tests on the straight leading-edge model were carried out without external financial support and were funded by the Lucas Wind Tunnel Fund at Caltech. The CAD design files of the original (CLEM) SWIFT model were provided to the authors by J. Coppin from DSTL at the incentive of G. Dale from AFRL. The authors are indebted to both and to their establishments for the information. Some CFD information that triggered the interest in the test was provided to the authors by R. Hooker of Helden Aerospace Co. Force and moment measurements were made by a six-component balance on loan from NASA Langley.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023