Single-shot pressure-sensitive paint lifetime measurements on fast rotating blades using an optimized double-shutter technique

single-shot lifetime technique pressure-sensitive paint roter aerodynamics 0203 mechanical engineering Hubschrauber, GO Experimentelle Verfahren, GO image blur 02 engineering and technology
DOI: 10.1007/s00348-017-2400-4 Publication Date: 2017-08-18T01:12:32Z
ABSTRACT
A pressure-sensitive paint (PSP) system is presented to measure global surface pressures on fast rotating blades. It is dedicated to solve the problem of blurred image data employing the single-shot lifetime method. The efficient blur reduction capability of an optimized double-shutter imaging technique is demonstrated omitting error-prone post-processing or laborious de-rotation setups. The system is applied on Mach-scaled DSA-9A helicopter blades in climb at various collective pitch settings and blade tip Mach and chord Reynolds numbers ( $$M_{\text {tip}}$$ = 0.29–0.57; $$Re_{\text {tip}}$$ = 4.63–9.26 $$\times 10^5$$ ). Temperature effects in the PSP are corrected by a theoretical approximation validated against measured temperatures using temperature-sensitive paint (TSP) on a separate blade. Ensemble-averaged PSP results are comparable to pressure-tap data on the same blade to within 250 Pa. Resulting pressure maps on the blade suction side reveal spatially high resolved flow features such as the leading edge suction peak, footprints of blade-tip vortices and evidence of laminar–turbulent boundary-layer (BL) transition. The findings are validated by a separately conducted BL transition measurement by means of TSP and numerical simulations using a 2D coupled Euler/boundary-layer code. Moreover, the principal ability of the single-shot technique to capture unsteady flow phenomena is stressed revealing three-dimensional pressure fluctuations at stall.
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