Empirical Study of Ceiling Proximity Effects and Electrostatic Adhesion for Small-scale Electroaerodynamic Thrusters
Nelson, C. Luke, Nations, Grant, Drew, Daniel S.
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Electroaerodynamic propulsion, where force is produced via the momentum-transferring collisions between accelerated ions and neutral air molecules, is a promising alternative mechanism for flight at the micro air vehicle scale due to its silent and solid-state nature. Its relatively low efficiency, however, has thus far precluded its use in a power-autonomous vehicle; leveraging the efficiency benefits of operation close to a fixed surface is a potential solution. While proximity effects like the ground and ceiling effects have been well-investigated for rotorcraft and flapping wing micro air vehicles, they have not been for electroaerodynamically-propelled fliers. In this work, we investigate the change in performance when centimeter-scale thrusters are operated close to a "ceiling" plane about the inlet. We show a surprising and, until now, unreported effect; a major electrostatic attractive component, analogous to electroadhesive pressure but instead mediated by a stable atmospheric plasma. The isolated electrostatic and fluid dynamic components of the ceiling effect are shown for different distances from the plane and for different materials. We further show that a flange attached to the inlet can vastly increase both components of force. A peak efficiency improvement of 600% is shown close to the ceiling. This work points the way towards effective use of the ceiling effect for power autonomous vehicles, extending flight duration, or as a perching mechanism.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Oct-24-2024
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- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Industry:
- Aerospace & Defense > Aircraft (0.89)
- Energy > Oil & Gas
- Upstream (0.46)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots > Autonomous Vehicles > Drones (0.68)