Amit A. Pawar, Kumar Sanat Ranjan, Arnab Roy, Sandeep Saha
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
A sports dart pierces the dartboard because it possesses a remarkable aerodynamic property of ‘self-correcting’ its attitude in flight. This property arises from its aerodynamic design with a long heavy Barrel and large cruciform wings known as flights. We characterize the aerodynamics of dart-shaped projectiles at typical flight Reynolds numbers between 14500 and 20500 using wind tunnel experiments and numerical simulations. Force measurement tests from wind tunnel experiments yield the lift, drag, and pitching moment coefficients over a range of angles of attack; the experimental estimates are in quantitative agreement with those obtained from numerical simulations. Examining the surface pressure distribution, streamlines, and wall shear–stress distribution, along with the skin friction lines obtained from numerical simulations, reveals that the aerodynamics of the dart is governed by an interaction between the Barrel vortex (BV) shed by the cone–cylinder body and the wing leading edge vortex (WLV) over the horizontal flights influenced by solid impediment offered by the vertical flights. Smoke flow visualization images corroborate the vortex–vortex and vortex–wall interactions over the flights found in the numerical simulations. A complex interplay of vortex structures is observed, which depends on the angle of attack. The WLV develops an elliptic instability while exhibiting a partial merger with the Barrel vortex in the presence of secondary vorticity generated by the walls amidst the rapid weakening of the WLV. We conclude that the role of aerodynamics is largely pitch stabilization by means of aerodynamic moment and the normal force generation.
期刊介绍:
Experiments in Fluids examines the advancement, extension, and improvement of new techniques of flow measurement. The journal also publishes contributions that employ existing experimental techniques to gain an understanding of the underlying flow physics in the areas of turbulence, aerodynamics, hydrodynamics, convective heat transfer, combustion, turbomachinery, multi-phase flows, and chemical, biological and geological flows. In addition, readers will find papers that report on investigations combining experimental and analytical/numerical approaches.