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Kim, Jooha
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Aerodynamic effects of rotor-rotor interaction on a twin-rotor system in ground effect

Author(s)
Lee, SeungcheolChae, SeokbongShin, YisuKim, Jooha
Issued Date
2026-03
DOI
10.1017/jfm.2026.11347
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/91199
Fulltext
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-fluid-mechanics/article/aerodynamic-effects-of-rotorrotor-interaction-on-a-twinrotor-system-in-ground-effect/B57E828030CE5C29E4315DF0F05D96D8
Citation
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, v.1031, pp.A42
Abstract
This study experimentally investigates the aerodynamic effects of rotor-rotor interaction in a twin-rotor system operating in ground effect at a rotor-tip Reynolds number of $10<^>5$ . The strength of the ground effect and the rotor interaction were controlled by adjusting the normalised ground standoff distance and rotor separation distance, respectively. For the single-rotor configuration, ground proximity generated a stagnation region within the wake, redirecting axial momentum radially outward to form a wall jet. As the rotor approached the ground, the stagnation region moved closer to the rotor disk, increasing the thrust coefficient. In the widely spaced twin-rotor case, the opposing wall jets from both rotors converged on the ground to form a stagnation point. From this point, the flow diverged outward, producing a fountain flow and transverse outflow. The fountain flow tilted the wakes toward each other, reducing thrust. As rotor spacing decreased, rotor-disk blockage intensified, suppressing the fountain flow. When the fountain-driven recirculating flow developed around the rotor tips, re-ingestion into the rotors caused substantial thrust reduction. Peak thrust loss could be identified using the momentum flux coefficient of the fountain flow. However, with very close rotor spacing, the weakened fountain flow contracted the recirculating region, suppressing wake deflection and largely restoring thrust. Importantly, the thrust loss induced by rotor interaction reached its maximum at smaller normalised rotor separation distances as the rotors operated closer to the ground. These findings quantitatively link the fountain-flow dynamics to thrust variation, offering new mechanistic insight into multirotor aerodynamics in ground effect.
Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
ISSN
0022-1120
Keyword (Author)
vortex interactionswakes
Keyword
FUNDAMENTALS

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