Ventilation prediction in future flying crafts: A method to predict mass flow in 1D
2025 (English)Independent thesis Advanced level (degree of Master (Two Years)), 20 credits / 30 HE credits
Student thesis
Abstract [en]
In the development of future fighter aircraft it is important to reduce unnecessarytime consumption. The geometry in the aircraft is essential to examine in an earlystage so it fulfills necessary demands, such as ventilation. To simulate ventilationflow is costly with large 3D simulations. Therefore, new ways of investigating fluidflow are looked upon. The objective of the study is to develop a 1D simulationmodel for aircraft ventilation systems. The purpose is to reduce the lead times inconstruction of aircraft as the 1D model can be used early in the design process, this1D model can also be used for parametric design and optimization. 3D simulations,using CFD, have high computational costs and need precise design parameters,resulting in longer lead times. The programs used throughout the study are STARCCM+for the CFD simulation and OpenModelica for the 1D simulation. TheCDF model is used to predict the mass flow through the ventilation system. A 1Dsimulation is implemented to simulate the same system with satisfactory accuracyusing 1D equations and simplifications. The CFD model and the 1D model arecompared in three different steady-state cases. The accuracy of the model rangesfrom 1%-9%, in the different flight cases. The relative error is higher for cases withhigher speeds, with a theory that the boxes in the domain, which are not accountedfor, give a significant error for higher speeds. However, the 1D tool offers a fast andpractical tool in an early design process, while the 3D CFD remains essential fordetailed and complex 3D flows.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2025. , p. 49
Keywords [en]
Fluid mechanics, CFD, RANS, Extended Bernoulli equation, Discharge coefficient, Laminar flow, Turbulent flow, Compressible flow, Incompressible flow, Flow near the solid boundary, Finite volume method, OpenModelica, Boundary conditions, Meshing, Mesh verification, Convergence, Model validation, Reynolds number, Mass flow, CFD visualization, STARCCM+, 3D-solver
National Category
Fluid Mechanics
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-219156ISRN: LIU-IEI-TEK-A--25/05206--SEOAI: oai:DiVA.org:liu-219156DiVA, id: diva2:2009987
External cooperation
SAAB Aeronautics
Subject / course
Applied Thermodynamics and Fluid Mechanics
Presentation
2025-06-12, S10, Hans Meijers väg 16, Linköping, 08:00 (Swedish)
Supervisors
Examiners
2025-10-292025-10-292025-10-29Bibliographically approved