The Validation and Application of CFD-generated Aircraft Carrier Airwakes for Flight Simulation



Watson, Neale ORCID: 0000-0003-0316-8266
(2021) The Validation and Application of CFD-generated Aircraft Carrier Airwakes for Flight Simulation. PhD thesis, University of Liverpool.

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Abstract

This thesis describes an extensive experimental and computational study of the air flow over the UK Royal Navy's Queen Elizabeth Class (QEC) aircraft carriers, including how the air flow will affect aircraft flying operations, particularly rotorcraft. Maritime fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft routinely perform launch and recovery manoeuvres to and from ships at sea, often in challenging environmental conditions. Pilots performing such manoeuvres must contend with ship motion, sea spray, and an unsteady airwake generated by the air flow shedding off the ship’s superstructure. The main aim of the research was to investigate the use of modelling and simulation to improve understanding of the flying environment over the flight deck of the QEC. The unsteady air flow over the QEC was created using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) and incorporated into flight simulators at the University of Liverpool (UoL) and at BAE Systems, Warton. Experimental data to confirm the validity of the computed air flow was obtained from a small-scale experiment in which a 1.4 m long (1:200) scale model of the QEC was submerged in a water channel and Acoustic Doppler Velocimetry (ADV) was used to measure the unsteady flow around the ship. The results show generally very good agreement between the model-scale experiment and CFD. Piloted flight simulation trials were conducted using the UoL’s HELIFLIGHT-R full-motion flight simulator in which a test pilot conducted simulated deck landings of a representative Sikorsky SH-60B Seahawk helicopter to the flight deck of the QEC under a range of wind conditions. Results for aircraft performance and pilot workload are presented. These trials demonstrated how flight simulation could be used to support flight trials and helicopter clearance activities, but also notes that real-world trials data are needed to compare with the simulations before the techniques can be beneficially deployed. A non-piloted simulation technique was also deployed in which the unsteady forces and moments imposed by the air flow onto the helicopter fuselage were quantified; the results were correlated with the pilot workload ratings from the piloted simulation trials. The results have demonstrated how modelling and simulation can be effectively used to inform real-world flight trials. The simulations reaffirmed how important it is that helicopter flight models respond to the very different velocity components that are imposed on different parts of the aircraft by the highly unsteady three-dimensional air flow. Fixed-wing flight models, however, are not typically designed to capture the unsteady moments created during hover in a highly turbulent flow at low speeds. A new aerodynamic model of a fixed-wing aircraft has been developed which uses strip theory to create the overall forces and moments acting on the aircraft when hovering in a ship airwake. The results show the effect of the QEC airwakes on a hovering fixed-wing aircraft and provide recommendations for the number of strips required to accurately capture the effect of the flow.

Item Type: Thesis (PhD)
Divisions: Faculty of Science and Engineering > School of Engineering
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 25 Jun 2021 12:11
Last Modified: 18 Jan 2023 21:37
DOI: 10.17638/03127582
Supervisors:
URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3127582