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Aerodynamic prediction of a projectile fitted with fins

Cédric Decrocq (Department of Aerodynamics, ISL – French-German Research Institute of Saint-Louis, Saint-Louis, France)
Bastien Martinez (Department of Aerodynamics, ISL – French-German Research Institute of Saint-Louis, Saint-Louis, France)
Marie Albisser (Department of Exterior-Ballistics, ISL – French-German Research Institute of Saint-Louis, Saint-Louis, France)
Simona Dobre (Department of Exterior-Ballistics, ISL – French-German Research Institute of Saint-Louis, Saint-Louis, France)
Patrick Gnemmi (Head of the Division Flight Techniques for Projectiles, ISL – French-German Research Institute of Saint-Louis, Saint-Louis, France)
Yannick Bailly (University of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté (UBFC), Belfort, France, and FEMTO-ST Institute, Department of Energy, Belfort, France)
Jean-Claude Roy (University of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté (UBFC), Belfort, France, and FEMTO-ST Institute, Department of Energy, Belfort, France)

International Journal of Numerical Methods for Heat & Fluid Flow

ISSN: 0961-5539

Article publication date: 8 May 2018

205

Abstract

Purpose

The present paper deals with weapon aerodynamics and aims to describe preliminary studies that were conducted for developing the next generation of long-range guided ammunition. Over history, ballistic research scientists were constantly investigating new artillery systems capable of overcoming limitations of range, accuracy and manoeuvrability. While futuristic technologies are increasingly under development, numerous issues concerning current powdered systems still need to be addressed. In this context, the present work deals with the design and the optimization of a new concept of long-range projectile with regard to multidisciplinary fields, including flight scenario, steering strategy, mechanical actuators or size of payload.

Design/methodology/approach

Investigations are conducted for configurations that combine existing full calibre 155 mm guided artillery shell with a set of lifting surfaces. As the capability of the ammunition highly depends on lifting surfaces in terms of number, shape or position, a parametric study has to be conducted for determining the best aerodynamic architecture. To speed-up this process, initial estimations are conducted thanks to low computational cost methods suitable for preliminary design requirements, in terms of time, accuracy and flexibility. The WASP code (Wing-Aerodynamic-eStimation-for-Projectiles) has been developed for rapidly predicting aerodynamic coefficients (static and dynamic) of a set of lifting surfaces fitted on a projectile fuselage, as a function of geometry and flight conditions, up to transonic velocities.

Findings

In the present study, WASP predictions at Mach 0.7 of both normal force and pitching moment coefficients are assessed for two configurations.

Originality/value

Analysis is conducted by gathering results from WASP, computational-fluid-dynamics (CFD) simulations, wind-tunnel experiments and free-flight tests. Obtained results demonstrate the ability of WASP code to be used for preliminary design steps.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors thank all the technical staff involved in the wind-tunnel experiments and in the free-flight tests.

Citation

Decrocq, C., Martinez, B., Albisser, M., Dobre, S., Gnemmi, P., Bailly, Y. and Roy, J.-C. (2018), "Aerodynamic prediction of a projectile fitted with fins", International Journal of Numerical Methods for Heat & Fluid Flow, Vol. 28 No. 5, pp. 1218-1236. https://doi.org/10.1108/HFF-06-2017-0259

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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