No Cover Image

Journal article 1486 views 852 downloads

Aerodynamic optimisation of the rear wheel fairing of the land speed record vehicle BLOODHOUND SSC

J. Townsend, Ben Evans Orcid Logo, T. Tudor

Aeronautical Journal, Volume: 120, Issue: 1228, Pages: 930 - 955

Swansea University Author: Ben Evans Orcid Logo

Check full text

DOI (Published version): 10.1017/aer.2016.40

Abstract

This paper describes the design optimisation study used to aerodynamically optimise the fairings that cover the rear wheels of the Land Speed Record vehicle, BLOODHOUND SuperSonic Car (SSC). Initially, using a Design of Experiments approach, a series of Computational Fluid Dynamics simulations were...

Full description

Published in: Aeronautical Journal
ISSN: 0001-9240 2059-6464
Published: 2016
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa31365
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Abstract: This paper describes the design optimisation study used to aerodynamically optimise the fairings that cover the rear wheels of the Land Speed Record vehicle, BLOODHOUND SuperSonic Car (SSC). Initially, using a Design of Experiments approach, a series of Computational Fluid Dynamics simulations were performed on a set of parametric geometries, with the goal of identifying a fairing geometry that was aerodynamically optimised for the target speed of 1,000 mph. Several aerodynamic properties were considered when deciding what design objectives the fairings would be optimised to achieve; chief amongst these was the minimisation of aerodynamic drag. A parallel, finite-volume Navier–Stokes solver was used on unstructured meshes in order to simulate the complex aerodynamic behaviour of the flow around the vehicle’s rear wheel structure, which involved a rotating wheel, and shockwaves generated close to a supersonic rolling ground plane. It was found that the simple response surface fitting approach did not sufficiently capture the complexities of the optimisation objective function across the high-dimensional design space. As a result, a Nelder–Mead optimisation approach was implemented, coupled with Radial Basis Function design space interpolation to find the final optimised fairing design. This paper presents the results of the optimisation study as well as indicating the likely impact this optimisation will have on the ultimate top speed of this unique vehicle.
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Issue: 1228
Start Page: 930
End Page: 955