Dynamic stall reattachment revisited
Sahar Rezapour, Karen Mulleners

TL;DR
This paper investigates the process of dynamic stall reattachment on airfoils, identifying key features, stages, and conditions that influence flow recovery, with implications for improving aerodynamic safety and performance.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the sequence of events and observable features during dynamic stall reattachment, introducing a critical leading-edge suction parameter as a threshold for reattachment initiation.
Findings
Reattachment delay decreases with increased pitching unsteadiness.
A critical leading-edge suction parameter triggers reattachment.
Reattachment process comprises three stages: delay, wave propagation, relaxation.
Abstract
Dynamic stall on airfoils is an undesirable and potentially dangerous phenomenon. The motto for aerodynamic systems with unsteadily moving wings, such as helicopters or wind turbines, is that prevention beats recovery. In case prevention fails or is not feasible, we need to know when recovery starts, how long it takes, and how we can improve it. This study revisits dynamic stall reattachment to identify the sequence of events during flow and load recovery and to characterise key observable features in the pressure, force, and flow field. Our analysis is based on time-resolved velocity field and surface pressure data obtained experimentally for a two-dimensional, sinusoidally pitching thin airfoil. Stall recovery is a transient process that does not start immediately when the angle of attack falls below the critical stall angle. The onset of recovery is delayed to angles below the…
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