名誉教授

Kozo Fujii

  (藤井 孝藏)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Professor of Emeritus, Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
Visiting Professor, Tokyo University of Science
Degree
Doctor of Engineering(The University of Tokyo)

Contact information
fujiirs.tus.ac.jp
Other name(s) (e.g. nickname)
Ko Fujii
J-GLOBAL ID
200901042342169670
researchmap Member ID
1000144496

External link

Major Research Interests

 4

Papers

 433
  • Kozo Fujii, Soshi Kawai, Datta Gaitonde
    Flow, Turbulence and Combustion, Jul 2, 2025  Peer-reviewedInvitedLead author
    <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>Scale-resolving simulations possess considerable benefits over modeled approaches because of their ability to access the underlying nonlinear fluid dynamics, and thus to predict not only the correct phenomenology, but also to generate insights on strategies to mitigate or eliminate undesirable features. The expense of resolving all pertinent turbulent scales becomes prohibitive however, as the size of the problem, typically measured by the Reynolds number based on a suitable set of reference parameters, becomes large, as is the case with flows of industrial interest such as full aircraft or their complex subsystems. This paper provides an assessment of scale-resolving methods, including some of the main benefits as well as barriers for use on large problems, together with a perspective on historical and recent trends that appear promising in the quest for routine industrial use. The factors that constitute the biggest hurdles to achieving acceptable wall-clock times and costs include meshing of complicated geometries, numerical schemes that are robust as well as accurate, suitable initial and boundary conditions, economical yet appropriate representation of near-wall turbulence, code parallelism, scalability and portability, and post-processing of the resulting big datasets. Considerations for these interrelated aspects are highlighted in the context of several 3D problems of increasing complexity, from wing sections without and with sweep, to aircraft wakes, propulsion subsystems, scramjet flowpaths and finally, full aircraft including empennages. Collectively, these examples feature the benefits of scale-resolving simulations. An illustrative approach that has reached a relatively high level of maturity using automatic mesh generation, a non-dissipative yet robust scheme, wall-modeling of turbulence, superior scalability and requiring little user intervention beyond providing the surface model, is used to demonstrate the potential of scale-resolving simulations for industry, achievable at modest cost and in reasonable wall-clock time.</jats:p>
  • Katsuhiro Sekine, Tomoaki Tatsukawa, Takeru Aoki, Kozo Fujii, Eri Itoh
    IEEE Access, 13 39631-39649, 2025  Peer-reviewed
  • Kozo Fujii, Yoshiaki Abe, Takuto Ogawa
    Proceedings of the Cambridge Unsteady Flow Symposium 2024, 257-271, Dec 3, 2024  Peer-reviewedInvited
  • Katsuhiro Sekine, Daiki Iwata, Philippe Bouchaudon, Tomoaki Tatsukawa, Kozo Fujii, Koji Tominaga, Eri Itoh
    Aerospace, 11(11) 866-866, Oct 22, 2024  Peer-reviewed
    The advancement of Arrival MANager (AMAN) is crucial for addressing the increasing complexity and demand of modern airspace. This study evaluates the operational feasibility and effectiveness of an innovative AMAN designed for en route airspace, the so-called En Route AMAN. The En Route AMAN functions as a controller support system, facilitating the sharing of information between en route air traffic controllers (ATCos), approach controllers (current AMAN), and airport controllers (Departure Managers) in airports with multiple runways. The En Route AMAN aims to support upstream ATCos by sequencing and spacing of incoming streams via speed control and runway assignment, thereby enhancing overall air traffic efficiency. Human-In-The-Loop simulations involving rated ATCos are performed under scenarios that replicate real-world traffic and weather conditions. These simulations focus on upstream airspace to assess the impact of En Route AMAN on delay mitigation and ATCos’ performance. Unlike previous studies that solely relied on theoretical models and fast-time simulation for operational feasibility evaluation, this approach incorporates ATCos’ real-time decision-making, situational awareness, and task management, addressing critical operationalization challenges. The results demonstrated that the En Route AMAN could reduce the average flight duration by up to 25.6 s and decrease the total number of ATCo instructions by up to 20% during peak traffic volume. These findings support that the En Route AMAN is both operationally viable and effective in mitigating arrival delays, highlighting the importance of Human-In-The-Loop for practical validation.
  • Takuto Ogawa, Kengo Asada, Aiko Yakeno, Kozo Fujii
    AIAA SCITECH 2024 Forum, Jan 4, 2024  

Misc.

 191

Books and Other Publications

 31

Presentations

 1066

Research Projects

 28