Citation:
Vouros S, Goulos I, Scullion C, et al., (2019) Impact of wake modeling uncertainty on helicopter rotor aeroacoustic analysis. In: 45th European Rotorcraft Forum 2019 (ERF 2019), 17-20 September 2019, Warsaw, Poland
Abstract:
Free-wake models are routinely used in aeroacoustic analysis of helicopter rotors; however, their semi-empiricism is
essentially accompanied with uncertainty related to physical wake parameters. In some cases, analysts have to resort to
empirical adaption of these parameters based on previous experimental evidence. This paper investigates the impact of
inherent uncertainty in wake aerodynamic modeling on the robustness of helicopter rotor aeroacoustic analysis. A freewake
aeroelastic rotor model is employed to predict high-resolution unsteady airloads, including blade-vortex
interactions. A rotor aeroacoustics model, fundamentally based on Acoustic Analogy, is utilized to calculate aerodynamic
noise in the time-domain. The individual analytical models are incorporated into a stochastic analysis numerical
procedure, implemented through non-intrusive Polynomial Chaos expansion. The possible sources of uncertainty in
wake tip-vortex core modeling are identified and their impact on noise predictions quantified. When experimental data to
adjust the tip-vortex core model are not available the uncertainty in acoustic pressure and ground noise impact at
observers dominated by blade-vortex interaction noise can reach up to 25% and 3.50 dB respectively. This work aims to
devise generalized uncertainty maps to be used as modeling guidelines for aeroacoustic analysis in the absence of the
robust evidence necessary for calibration of semi-empirical vortex core models.