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Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 μm Fiber Doppler Lidar

2009

Cite this paper

MLAcontent_copy

Lugan, Sebastien. Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 Μm Fiber Doppler Lidar. ONERA, 2009.

APAcontent_copy

Lugan, S. (2009). Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 μm Fiber Doppler Lidar.

Chicagocontent_copy

Lugan, Sebastien. “Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 Μm Fiber Doppler Lidar,” 2009.

Vancouvercontent_copy

Lugan S. Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 μm Fiber Doppler Lidar. 2009;

Harvardcontent_copy

Lugan, S. (2009) “Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 μm Fiber Doppler Lidar.” ONERA.

Abstract

For ten years now, Onera has been developing lidar tools for wake vortex detection and studies. Since 2003, new developments based on 1.5 μm fibered laser sources have been achieved in parallel with extensive research work on the laser sources themselves. Three innovative lidars have been developed and are presented in this paper: 1) A mini-lidar, based on a CW (continuous-wave) 2 W / 1.5 μm laser source, for aircraft model wake vortex characterization in a catapult facility. A self-triangulation technique allows the vortex core position to be found with 10 cm error, and the circulation error is 10 %. 2) A pulsed 1.5 μm lidar, based on a 50 μJ / 15 kHz MOPA (Master Oscillator Power Amplifier) source, for lateral wake vortex monitoring at airports. The range is 400 m, the core position error is about ± 2 m and the circulation error is about 10 %. 3) A pulsed 1.5 μm lidar, based on a 120 μJ / 12 kHz MOPA source, for onboard axial wake vortex detection. Ground based lidar tests at Orly...

Issue 1 - December 2009 - Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 µm Fiber Doppler Lidar AL01-07 1 Optical Diagnostics of Flows Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 µm Fiber Doppler Lidar A. Dolfi-Bouteyre, B. Augere, M. Valla, D. Goular, D. Fleury, G. Canat, C. Planchat, T. Gaudo, C. Besson, A. Gilliot (Onera) J.-P. Cariou, O. Petilon, J. Lawson-Daku (Leosphere) S. Brousmiche, S. Lugan, L. Bricteux, B. Macq (Université catholique de Louvain) E-mail: Agnes.Dolfi-Bouteyre@onera.fr F or ten years now, Onera has been developing lidar tools for wake vortex detection and studies. Since 2003, new developments based on 1.5 µm fibered laser sources have been achieved in parallel with extensive research work on the laser sources them- selves. Three innovative lidars have been developed and are presented in this paper: 1) A mini-lidar, based on a CW (continuous-wave) 2 W / 1.5 µm laser source, for aircraft model wake vortex characterization in a catapult facility. A self-triangulation technique allows the vortex core position to be found with 10 cm error, and the circula- tion error is 10 %. 2) A pulsed 1.5 µm lidar, based on a 50 µJ / 15 kHz MOPA (Master Oscillator Power Amplifier) source, for lateral wake vortex monitoring at airports. The range is 400 m, the core position error is about ± 2 m and the circulation error is about 10 %. 3) A pulsed 1.5 µm lidar, based on a 120 µJ / 12 kHz MOPA source, for onboard axial wake vortex detection. Ground based lidar tests at Orly airport have demonstrated wake vortex detection up to 1.2 km. Introduction Detecting atmospheric hazards such as wind shear, clear air turbu- lence and wake vortices has been a major concern for twenty years. The lift force exerted on the aircraft wing creates a counter-rotating pair of trailing vortices (wake vortex) which constitute a potential haz- ard to following aircraft. Detecting these vortices is of crucial impor- tance for flight safety, airport capacity and aircraft design [1]. The experimental techniques used to study wake vortices include co- herent lidar (light detection and ranging), also called coherent laser radar or CLR. Coherent lidars are practical and efficient tools to char- acterize and monitor wind fields and more specifically wake vortices [2], [3], [4]. The measurement of the Doppler shift of light (from a laser source), after scattering from atmospheric particles, implies the line- of-sight flow velocity and allows a picture of vortex flow to be built up. Monitoring of vortices at ranges exceeding a few hundred meters is best carried out using pulsed lidar. Detailed measurements at short range are better obtained with CW (continuous-wave) lidar [5]. Lidars have the potential to help with low-vortex wing design and for quanti- fying the vortex hazard from existing aircraft. Because low-vortex wing design requires extended measurements, reduced-scale test facilities such as wind tunnels, water tanks or cat- apults have been used to perform easy and low-cost measurements. Full-scale measurements are however necessary to check the atmo- spheric impact on wake vortex evolution and lidar is the link between reduced-scale and full-scale approaches. Onera has been developing these coherent detection lidar tools for wake vortex characterization and monitoring for ten years now. New developments are based on 1.5 µm fiber laser sources, which have a high electrical to optical efficiency ~10 %, thus allowing for low electrical consumption. This wavelength is also the most favorable for eyesafe lidar designs: as the maximum laser energy imposed by eye safety regulations is high, the laser power can be increased with little constraint on the lidar operation or design. It is now well-established that a fiber architecture is easy to adjust and mechanically reliable in a vibrating environment; other advantages are the compactness and flexibility in terms of onboard installation. The lidar can be split into subsystems, far apart in the aircraft body and linked by fiber optics. 1.5 µm fiber coherent lidars have recently been flown with success [5], [6]. In this paper we will present the most recent lidar developments at Onera for wake vortex characterization and monitoring. The coherent detection lidar technique and architecture are first described. Then we present reduced-scale measurements with a self-triangulation CW technique. The measurements are compared with PIV (particle imaging velocimetry) for ground-based tests (Box 1). The rest of this article deals with full-scale measurements at airport sites with pulsed lidar. The lidar developed for transverse wake vortex measurements is presented. Finally, we describe a future onboard pulsed lidar for axial wake vortex detection based on a high-brightness large-core fiber amplifier (Box 2: comparison between full-scale and reduced-scale measurements).
Issue 1 - December 2009 - Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 µm Fiber Doppler Lidar AL01-07 2 Coherent detection lidar principle and wake vortex detection application Coherent detection lidar principle Accurate distant wind velocity measurements are possible with la- ser anemometry based on coherent detection lidar (Figure 1). A laser beam is focused on atmospheric aerosols, and then reflected by Mie diffusion. The reflected beam is frequency shifted because of relative displacement between the aerosols and the lidar (the Doppler effect). In order to measure the radial velocity information contained in the beam phase, the backscattered beam is mixed in an optical interfer- ometer with a reference beam (the LO or local oscillator). Thanks to a close optical frequency match between the backscattered beam and the LO, this coherent beam combining allows for a convenient trans- position into the radiofrequency domain. The electric current given by the optical detection (the so-called heterodyne current) is described by: () 2. . . . cos(2 ( ). ) het S LO s LO D i t KPP f f f t π φ = + + (1) where K is a coefficient taking into account heterodyne efficiency and detector efficiency, P s is the backscattered beam power, P LO is the local oscillator beam power, fs is the laser source frequency, f LO is the local oscillator frequency, ϕ is the heterodyne signal phase, f D is the Doppler frequency given by 2. = r D V f λ where r V is the radial velocity, and λ is the laser beam wavelength. The shift D f is 1.3 MHz per m/s for a laser wavelength of 1.54 µm. In practice, the LO beam is additionally shifted (via an acousto- optic modulator) by typically F = 40 MHz or 70 MHz, depending on the application.The heterodyne signal frequency is then . Moreover, the term 2 S LO .K.P .P in the het- erodyne current shows that coherent detection enhances the detec- tion sensibility by multiplying the very weak backscattered signal power by the local oscillator power. Figure 1 - Coherent detection lidar principle. Wake vortex characterization An aircraft in flight always creates vortices in its wake, and their strength increases with the mass of the aircraft. In a plane perpen- dicular to the aircraft path, the largest vortices are generated at the wingtips. These are large masses of rotating air with induced tangen- tial velocities as high as 30 m/s. In order to characterize wake vortices with a lidar, a scanning device is used as shown in Figure 2. Figure 2 - Lidar scanning pattern: (a) for lateral wake vortex detection, (b) for axial wake vortex detection. LIDAR V air V R Natural aerosols f s f s + f D Signal: P s Laser Interferometer Detector (f s - f OL )=f D local oscillator: P ol λ LIDAR LIDAR Scanning angle a) b) S OL D D f f f f f + =∆ +
Issue 1 - December 2009 - Aircraft Wake Vortex Study and Characterization with 1.5 µm Fiber Doppler Lidar AL01-07 3 Wake vortex axial detection is more difficult because the radial veloc- ity components (the projections of the 3D air velocity on the lidar beam axis) are very low. Instead of radial velocity, it is easier to detect the spectral broadening due to vortex turbulence. Reduced-scale measurements The Onera catapult facility offers the possibility of observing the total lifetime of the wake, starting from its origin at the wing, up to about a hundred wingspans. In this facility, non-motorized free-flying scale models are propelled by means of a pneumatic catapult via a trolley. Once launched, the model flies freely without any wall or mounting interference in a 90 m long, 20 m wide and 20 m high observation area. Afterwards, the model is recovered from a volume of plastic foam (Figure 4). Reduced-scale aircraft models have wingspans in the 2 m range (Figure 5). Oil droplets are generated to seed the vortices. Lidar measurements in vertical observation planes, transverse to the flight path of the model, Lateral detection and characterization For lateral detection, the scan is in a plane perpendicular to the air- craft path (Figure 2a) so the measured tangential velocities are very high. The signal processing usually associated with this lateral (side- ways on) detection is detailed in Figure 3. A Fourier-transform power spectral estimate for the heterodyne signal yields a weighted veloc- ity distribution (weighted along the whole line of sight for CW lidar, or within the range gate for pulsed lidar). For a scan angle θ i the high- est velocity measured (in absolute value) is the tangential one shown as V i max . The maximum (or minimum) velocity extraction for each line of sight or range gate enables us to reconstruct the velocity profile along a diameter of the wake vortex. Axial detection A pulsed laser allows the wind field to be spatially resolved along its line of sight, and scanning of the laser (e.g. the sinusoidal scan of Figure 2b) allows for the generation of an accurate 3D velocity image of the wind field. Figure 3 - Signal processing scheme for lidar lateral characterization of a vortex. Figure 4 - B20 catapult facility (view from above): observation planes for PIV and lidar measurements. LIDAR θ scan θ i V i V i max α i i(t) t Lidar heterodyne signal Fourier transform Maximun or minimum velocity extractionfor the all scan Velocity spectrum for a line of sight θ i or a range gate Vortex velocity profil along a diameter θ i V radial θ scan P s =TF(i(t)).TFx(i(t)) V i cos α i Observatoin plane for PIV measurement Observatoin plane for Lidar measurement Lidar Model release (x=29 m) Catapult Control room 28 m 26 m 90 m Model recovery box (movable) 20 m V i max V i max

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  19. PIv (Particle Imaging velocimetry) MOPfA (Master Oscillator Power fiber Amplifier) HMI (Human-Machine Interface) sBs (stimulated Brillouin scattering) lMA (large-Mode-Area)
  20. AsE (Amplified spontaneous Emission)

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