Well, since you are designing a chopper thats going to be much larger then anything you can purchase in a hobby shop, im afraid you will probably end up having to fabricate most items like swashplates, rotors, gearboxes, and the like... Have done a little bit of reaserch into larger rc helicopters, and yours is going to have to be something like the Yamaha RMAX, which was designed for agricultural crop spraying. It was designed to carry 22 Kg (aprox 48 lbs) and is powered with a 246 cc horizontally opposed 2 cyl liquid cooled engine. You are looking to lift about half that weight so you will want approximately half the engine power, at about a 125cc engine. But you have to remember that just because the engine is half the displacement, doesn't necessarily mean that its going to produce half the power... it may be less, it may be more. That will require research along with taking in to account its weight/power ratio.
Yamaha RMAX helicopter specs
I would probably suggest using a single rotor design for your first prototype anyways because of its 'simplicity'. its still a complicated system, but when you get into dual rotor aircraft there is much more to take in to account on the design aspect.
Im not sure how familiar you are with R/C helicopters, helicopters in general, and the physics of flight of a rotational winged aircraft... so assuming its a minimal amount I would probably suggest starting this whole project off by purchasing an r/c helicopter kit, assembling it yourself, and learning to fly it manually... this experience would give you a mountain of knowledge on how helicopters work mechanically and their physics of flight.
While you are learning to build and fly a normal r/c chopper you could use a program such as Solidworks or something similar to do your design phaze of your project... This is not something you are just simply going to piece together bit by bit with 'spare' parts. Or if you want so save time and have lots of money, just buy yourself an RMAX I know i want one now haha
As we say in the aviation business; if you want to fly higher, faster, and carry more weight... Forget about aerodynamics theory... Its MONEY that makes aircraft fly... hahaha