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NASA NTRS · Conference Paper

Transonic Experimental Observations of Abrupt Wing Stall on an F/A-18E Model (Invited)

Published 2019-07-12 From Langley Research Center 3 authors

Attribution

This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Langley Research Center.

Abstract

Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.

A transonic wind tunnel test of an 8% F/A-18E model was conducted in the NASA Langley Research Center (LaRC) 16 ft Transonic Tunnel (16-ft TT) to investigate on-surface flow physics during stall. The technical approach employed focused on correlating static (or time-averaged) and unsteady wind-tunnel test data to the unsteady wing-stall events using force, moment, pressure, and pressure-sensitive-paint measurements. This paper focuses on data obtained on the pre-production configuration of the F/A-18E aircraft at Mach number of 0.90. The flow unsteadiness occurring on the wing as the wing went through the stall process was captured using the time history of balance and pressure measurements and by calculating the root mean square (RMS) for a number of instrument signals. The second step was to gather global perspectives on the pressures influencing the wing stall process. The abrupt wing stall experienced by the 8% F/A-18E Model was observed to be an unsteady event triggered by the rapid advancement of separation, which had migrated forward from the trailing edge, to the leading-edge flap hingeline over a very small increment in angle of attack. The angle of attack at which this stall occurred varied, from run to run, over an 1 deg increment. The abrupt wing stall was observed, using pressure-sensitive-paint, to occur simultaneously on both wing panels or asymmetrically. The pressure-sensitive paint data and wingroot bending moment data were essential in providing insight to the flow structures occurring over the wing and the possible asymmetry of those flow structures. A repeatability analysis conducted on eight runs of static data provided a quick and inexpensive examination of the unsteady aerodynamic characteristics of abrupt wing stall. The results of the repeatability analysis agreed extremely well with data obtained using unsteady measurement techniques. This approach could be used to identify test conditions for more complex unsteady data measurements using special instrumentation.

Authors

  • McMillin, S. Naomi NASA Langley Research Center
  • Hall, Robert M. NASA Langley Research Center
  • Lamar, John E. NASA Langley Research Center

Citation: McMillin, S. Naomi, Hall, Robert M., Lamar, John E. (2019). Transonic Experimental Observations of Abrupt Wing Stall on an F/A-18E Model (Invited). Langley Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 20030012596. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20030012596 ↗