Mission Performance Simulation of Integrated Helicopter–Engine Systems Using an Aeroelastic Rotor Model

Author:

Goulos Ioannis1,Giannakakis Panagiotis1,Pachidis Vassilios1,Pilidis Pericles2

Affiliation:

1. e-mail:

2. e-mail:  Department of Power & Propulsion, Cranfield University, Bedfordshire MK43 0AL, UK

Abstract

This paper presents an integrated approach, targeting the comprehensive assessment of combined helicopter engine designs within designated operations. The developed methodology comprises a series of individual modeling theories, each applicable to a different aspect of helicopter flight dynamics and performance. These relate to rotor blade modal analysis, three-dimensional flight path definition, flight dynamics trim solution, aeroelasticity, and engine performance. The individual mathematical models are elaborately integrated within a numerical procedure, solving for the total mission fuel consumption. The overall simulation framework is applied to the performance analysis of the Aérospatiale SA330 helicopter within two generic, twin-engine medium helicopter missions. An extensive comparison with flight test data on main rotor trim controls, power requirements, and unsteady blade structural loads is presented. It is shown that, for the typical range of operating conditions encountered by modern twin-engine medium civil helicopters, the effect of operational altitude on fuel consumption is predominantly influenced by the corresponding effects induced on the engine rather than on airframe rotor performance. The implications associated with the implicit coupling between aircraft and engine performance are discussed in the context of mission analysis. The potential to comprehensively evaluate integrated helicopter engine systems within complete three-dimensional operations using modeling fidelity designated for main rotor design applications is demonstrated. The proposed method essentially constitutes an enabler in terms of focusing the rotorcraft design process on designated operation types rather than on specific sets of flight conditions.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Aerospace Engineering,Fuel Technology,Nuclear Energy and Engineering

Reference22 articles.

1. Goulos, I., Mohseni, M., Pachidis, V., d'Ippolito, R., and Stevens, J., 2010, “Simulation Framework Development for Helicopter Mission Analysis,” Proceedings of ASME Turbo Expo, Glasgow, UK, June 14–18, ASME Paper No. GT2010-23389, pp. 843–852.10.1115/GT2010-23389

2. d'Ippolito, R., Stevens, J., Pachidis, V., Berta, A., Goulos, I., and Rizzi, C., 2010, “A Multidisciplinary Simulation Framework for Optimization of Rotorcraft Operations and Environmental Impact,” 2nd International Conference on Engineering Optimization (EngOpt 2010), Lisbon, Portugal, September 6–9.

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5. An Integrated Approach for the Multidisciplinary Design of Optimum Rotorcraft Operations;ASME J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power,2012

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