Wind turbines and other fluid machinery can experience stalls during operation, leading to highly transient and heavy load fluctuations that jeopardize the structural integrity of the turbines and result in fatigue failure, significantly reducing performance. Inspired by the protuberance on the leading edge of a humpback whale's pectoral fin, eight different configurations of protuberances were added to the leading edge of a NACA 0021 airfoil segment with a span of 0.24m as a passive control method to investigate their inhibitory effect on flow separation. The protuberance structures altered the pressure distribution on the airfoil's leading edge, particularly reducing the pressure at the trough after stall, allowing the fluid to reattach to the airfoil surface and delaying the onset of dynamic stall. The most significant improvement in alleviating airfoil stall was observed with the protuberance structure composed of a quarter-circle with a radius of 0.02m and a quarter-circle with a radius of 0.01m. At an angle of attack of 22° after the original airfoil stall, the lift coefficient increased by 6.7.7%. At the initial angle of attack of 4°, the lift coefficient increased by 60.4%, and then maintained a stable linear growth at various angles, with no stall occurring at the 24° angle of attack. This study provides inspiration for the design of bionic airfoil protuberance on structures and has guiding value for practical applications.
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Research on the Shape of Biomimetic Airfoil Leading to Edge Protuberance
Published:
15 May 2024
by MDPI
in The 1st International Online Conference on Biomimetics
session Biomimetic Design, Constructions and Devices
Abstract:
Keywords: Leading-edge protuberance; Flow control; Lift coefficient; Numerical simulation