Publications of Dr. Kevin D. Jones:
Fixed and Flapping Wing Aerodynamics for Micro Air Vehicle Applications,
AIAA Progress in Astronautics and Aeronautics, Vol. 195, Ed. T. Mueller, 2001, pp. 307-339.
(Presented at the Converence on Fixed, Flapping and Rotary Wing Vehicles at Very Low Reynolds Numbers,
Notre Dame, Indiana, June 5-7, 2000
Title: CHAPTER 16: EXPERIMENTAL AND COMPUTATIONAL INVESTIGATION OF FLAPPING-WING PROPULSION FOR MICRO AIR VEHICLES
Authors: K.D. Jones, T.C. Lund and M.F. Platzer
Abstract:
Recent interest in the development of micro-air-vehicles (MAVs)
has led to a renewed interest in flapping-wing propulsion. In the
present study flapping-wing configurations found numerically to
produce high propulsive-efficiencies are investigated experimentally.
Several models of varying scales and complexity are developed and
tested in a low-speed wind-tunnel. The variation in scale of the
models provides some insight into the rather severe Reynolds number
effects, and the development of the smaller models provides an
introduction into the difficulties in the design, manufacture and
testing of small-scale vehicles.
The thrust is measured directly and compared with numerical
predictions, with variations in the flapping motion, aspect-ratio
and scale. Measured thrust for the larger model compares well with
the numerical predictions both qualitatively and quantitatively over
most of the parameter-space. However, the smaller model, with
approximately half the chord-length and a somewhat different flapping
motion, produces drastically different performance, indicating the
presence of massive flow separation. The presented results indicate
the necessity to better understand, and ultimately to utilize, flow
separation in the design of successful flapping-wing MAVs.
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