LES of practical aeronautical flows at stall conditions

ORAL

Abstract

The present study aims to examine the performance wall-modeled LES in flows over realistic aircraft geometry using the state-of-the-art methodologies for low-dissipation LES and standard equilibrium wall model, particularly for prediction of massive flow separation encountered at high angles of attack. Simulations of two aircraft geometries at high angles of attack are considered: a high lift JAXA standard model (Rec = 1.93M; AIAA Papers 2010-0684, 2008-0350 by Yokokawa et al.) and the NASA Common Research model (Rec = 11M; Boyet, CEAS Aero. J., 2018). Wall-modeled LES calculations are conducted using equilibrium wall models and the static-coefficient subgrid-scale eddy-viscosity model of Vreman. Predictions of global forces and surface pressure distributions by two low-dissipation LES codes are shown to be in reasonable agreement with experimental measurements. All calculations presented were performed in less than 120 hours using < 3K Intel CPU cores, demonstrating that wall modeled LES for external aerodynamics is becoming increasingly affordable.

*Funded by NASA (Grant No. NNX15AU93A). This work was performed as part of the CTR Summer program 2018. Computing resource was provided by US DOE through the INCITE program, and the Barcelona Supercomputing Center.

Presenters

  • George Ilhwan Park

    • Univ of Pennsylvania
    • University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • George Ilhwan Park

    • Univ of Pennsylvania
    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Oriol Lehmkuhl

    • Barcelona Supercomputing Center
  • Sanjeeb Bose

    • Cascade Technologies
  • Parviz Moin

    • Center for Turbulence Research, Stanford University
    • Stanford University
    • Stanford Univ