I'm not an aeronautical engineer but I did teach physics and I can see a fundamental flaw in your proposal.
Directly scaling up from a small size to a large size with anything that flies usually won't work. For example, if you could create an eagle that was 10 times as big as the ones found in nature, it wouldn't be able to fly. That's because an eagle's ability to achieve lift is, just like an aircraft's, largely dependent upon the surface area of its wings. If you increase the eagle's linear dimensions by 10, you'll increase the surface area of its wings by 10 squared = 100. However you'll increase its volume (and consequently is mass) by 10 cubed = 1000. So you'd end up with a mega-eagle weighing 1000 times what a natural one does but with only 100 times the lift available to its wings, meaning that there would insufficient lift available to get it off the ground.
Similar considerations apply to your own plans. As you scale up the size of the drone, the weight will increase faster than the surface area of its blades does, so that it can no longer fly. (In practice a small amount of scaling up might be possible by using more powerful motors to rotate the blades faster, providing some extra lift that way, but what you're proposing simply isn't going to work).