This study investigated the noise emission and thrust performance of a heavy-lift unmanned air vehicle (UAV) with a coaxial propulsion system that operates under differential rotor speeds. The UAV adopted an octo-quad architecture, where each rotor pair consists of two propellers with different blades, allowing independent operation of fore and aft rotors in corotating (CR) and contra-rotating (CTR) configurations. Acoustic emissions and thrust were measured under steady conditions. The study compared the performances of CR and CTR configurations and examined the influence of differential rotor speed on the noise emission of the vehicle under different loads for both configurations. The results indicate that the CTR configuration achieves a maximum load factor 0.28 higher than that of the CR configuration and features lower noise at the same thrust when employing differential rotor speed. For both configurations, the drone's noise was influenced by the aerodynamic characteristics of propellers. Specifically, increasing the fore rotor speed relative to the aft rotor amplifies the noise, whereas increasing the aft rotor speed reduces noise without compromising thrust. Corresponding noise spectra were analyzed across different load factors. The results provide insights that can inform about the optimization of noise emission and performance of UAVs with coaxial propulsion systems.
Wang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: