TY - JOUR
T1 - The Effect of Large Droplet and Spanwise Ridge Ice Accretion on the Aerodynamic Performance of Swept Wings
AU - Woodard, Brian
AU - Bragg, Michael
AU - Smith, Timothy G.
N1 - The authors gratefully acknowledge the assistance of many other individuals and organizations that made this work possible. Specifically, the analysis presented in this work was enhanced by contributions from James Riley and Ezgi Oztekin of the FAA Technical Center and Andy Broeren and Sam Lee of the Icing Branch at the NASA Glenn Research Center. Frederic Moens of ONERA generously extracted the boundary layer data presented in this work from simulations originally performed to support the earlier SWIP efforts. Emma Wood, a student at the University of Illinois, contributed to the experimental ice shape design and manufacturing, and she spent many hours in the wind tunnel assisting in the data collection of the results presented here. Marty Bathgate, another University of Illinois student, generated many of the plots and figures presented in this work. The engineers and technicians at the WSU Beech wind tunnel were extraordinarily helpful in keeping the tests running smoothly and efficiently. The University of Illinois is funded for this program by FAA grant 692M152140006.
PY - 2023/6/15
Y1 - 2023/6/15
N2 - Wind tunnel tests were performed on an 8.9-percent scale semispan wing in the Wichita State University 7x10-foot wind tunnel with simulated ice accretion shapes. Simulated ice shapes from large-droplet clouds, simple-geometry ice horn shapes, and simple-geometry spanwise ridge shapes typical of runback icing were tested. Three Reynolds number and Mach number combinations were tested over a range of angles of attack. Aerodynamic forces and moments were acquired from the tunnel balance and surface pressures and oil flow visualizations were acquired. This research supplements the Swept Wing Icing Program recently concluded by NASA, FAA, ONERA, and their partners by testing new ice shapes on the same wind tunnel model. Additional surface roughness was added to simulate large-droplet ice accretion aft of the highly three-dimensional primary ice shape, and it had little effect on the wing aerodynamic performance. Spanwise ridge simulations produced large increases in drag and small increases in maximum lift in most cases. Ridge size and location had significant effects on the performance and the lower-surface ridge was important contributing to the drag at low angle of attack and lift at high angle of attack due to the movement of the attachment line around the leading edge. Oil flow visualization and surface pressures help explain the spanwise effects on the flowfield and the resulting changes in lift and moment produced by the various ice shape simulations. Studies of a partial-span ridge simulating a residual icing case and additional simple horn cases to supplement SWIP data are also presented. The aerodynamic performance results from the simple horn ice cases are consistent with the previously identified trends in earlier studies with a more limited range of horn angles.
AB - Wind tunnel tests were performed on an 8.9-percent scale semispan wing in the Wichita State University 7x10-foot wind tunnel with simulated ice accretion shapes. Simulated ice shapes from large-droplet clouds, simple-geometry ice horn shapes, and simple-geometry spanwise ridge shapes typical of runback icing were tested. Three Reynolds number and Mach number combinations were tested over a range of angles of attack. Aerodynamic forces and moments were acquired from the tunnel balance and surface pressures and oil flow visualizations were acquired. This research supplements the Swept Wing Icing Program recently concluded by NASA, FAA, ONERA, and their partners by testing new ice shapes on the same wind tunnel model. Additional surface roughness was added to simulate large-droplet ice accretion aft of the highly three-dimensional primary ice shape, and it had little effect on the wing aerodynamic performance. Spanwise ridge simulations produced large increases in drag and small increases in maximum lift in most cases. Ridge size and location had significant effects on the performance and the lower-surface ridge was important contributing to the drag at low angle of attack and lift at high angle of attack due to the movement of the attachment line around the leading edge. Oil flow visualization and surface pressures help explain the spanwise effects on the flowfield and the resulting changes in lift and moment produced by the various ice shape simulations. Studies of a partial-span ridge simulating a residual icing case and additional simple horn cases to supplement SWIP data are also presented. The aerodynamic performance results from the simple horn ice cases are consistent with the previously identified trends in earlier studies with a more limited range of horn angles.
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U2 - 10.4271/2023-01-1385
DO - 10.4271/2023-01-1385
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85170083495
SN - 0148-7191
JO - SAE Technical Papers
JF - SAE Technical Papers
T2 - SAE 2023 International Conference on Icing of Aircraft, Engines, and Structures, ICE 2023
Y2 - 20 June 2023 through 23 June 2023
ER -