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Aerodynamics 101 How do those things really fly?. Dr. Paul Kutler Saturday, March 31, 2007 Monterey Airport. Airbus 380. An aerodynamics challenge. FA-18 Condensation Pattern. Aerodynamics involves multiple flow regimes. Legacy Aircraft. Aerodynamics is a maturing science. Outline.
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Aerodynamics 101How do those things really fly? Dr. Paul Kutler Saturday, March 31, 2007 Monterey Airport
Airbus 380 An aerodynamics challenge
FA-18 Condensation Pattern Aerodynamics involves multiple flow regimes
Legacy Aircraft Aerodynamics is a maturing science
Outline • Terms and Definitions • Forces Acting on Airplane • Lift • Drag • Concluding remarks
Terms and Nomenclature • Airfoil • Angle of attack • Angle of incidence • Aspect Ratio • Boundary Layer • Camber • Chord • Mean camber line • Pressure coefficient • Leading edge • Relative wind • Reynolds Number • Thickness • Trailing edge • Wing planform • Wingspan
Definition of Lift, Drag & Moment L = 1/2 V2 CL S D = 1/2 V2 CD S M = 1/2 V2 CM S c
A Misconception • A fluid element that splits at the leading edge and travels over and under the airfoil will meet at the trailing edge. • The distance traveled over the top is greater than over the bottom. • It must therefore travel faster over the top to meet at the trailing edge. • According to Bernoulli’s equation, the pressure is lower on the top than on the bottom. • Hence, lift is produced.
How Lift is Produced • Continuity equation • Bernoulli’s equation • Pressure differential • Lift is produced
The Truth • A fluid element moving over the top surface leaves the trailing edge long before the fluid element moving over the bottom surface reaches the trailing edge. • The two elements do not meet at the trailing edge. • This result has been validated both experimentally and computationally.
Slow Flight and Steep Turns L = 1/2 V2 CL SOutcome versus Action • Slow Flight • Lift equals weight • Velocity is decreased • CL must increase • must be increased on the lift curve • Velocity can be reduced until CLmax is reached • Beyond that, a stall results
Slow Flight and Steep TurnsL = 1/2 V2 CL SOutcome versus Action(Concluded) • Steep Turns (“Bank, yank and crank”) • Lift vector is rotated inward (“bank”) by the bank angle reducing the vertical component of lift • Lift equals weight divided by cosine • Either V (“crank”), CL or both must be increased to replenish lift • To increase CL, increase (“yank”) on the lift curve • To increase V, give it some gas • More effective since lift is proportional to the velocity squared
Effect of Bank Angle on Stall Speed • L = 1/2 V2 CL S • equals the bank angle • At stall CL equals CLmax • L = W / cos • Thus • Vstall = [2 W / ( CL max S cos )] 1/2 • Airplane thus stalls at a higher speed • Load factor increases in a bank • Thus as load factor increases, Vstall increases • This is what’s taught in the “Pilot’s Handbook”
Airfoil Pressure Distribution NACA 0012, M ∞ = 0.345, = 3.930
Drag of an Airfoil D = Df+ Dp + Dw D = total drag on airfoil Df = skin friction drag Dp = pressure drag due to flow separation Dw = wave drag (for transonic and supersonic flows)
Skin Friction Drag • The flow at the surface of the airfoil adheres to the surface (“no-slip condition”) • A “boundary layer” is created-a thin viscous region near the airfoil surface • Friction of the air at the surface creates a shear stress • The velocity profile in the boundary layer goes from zero at the wall to 99% of the free-stream value • = (dV/dy)wall • is the dynamic viscosity of air [3.73 (10) -7 sl/f/s]
The Boundary Layer • Two types of viscous flows • Laminar • Streamlines are smooth and regular • Fluid element moves smoothly along streamline • Produces less drag • Turbulent • Streamlines break up • Fluid element moves in a random, irregular and tortuous fashion • Produces more drag • w laminar < w turbulent • Reynolds Number • Rex = V∞ x / • Ratio of inertia to viscous forces
Boundary Layer Thickness(Flat Plate) • Laminar Flow • = 5 x / Rex1/2 • Turbulent Flow • = 0.16 x / Rex1/7 • Turbulent Flow-Tripped B.L. • = 0.37 x / Rex1/5 • Example: Chord = 5 f, V∞ = 150 MPH, Sea Level • Rex = 6,962,025 • = 0.114 inches Laminar B.L. • = 1.011 inches Turbulent B.L. • = 7.049 inches Tripped Turbulent B.L.
Infinite vs. Finite Wings AR = b2 / S
The Origin of Induced Drag Di = L sin i
Elliptical Lift Distribution CD,I = CL2/ (e AR)
Ground Effect • Occurs during landing and takeoff • Gives a feeling of “floating” or “riding on a cushion of air” between wing and ground • In fact, there is no cushion of air • Its effect is to increase the lift of the wing and reduce the induced drag • The ground diminishes the strength of the wing tip vortices and reduces the amount of downwash • The effective angle of attack is increased and lift increases
Ground Effect(Concluded) • Mathematically Speaking • L = 1/2 ∞V∞2S CL • An increased angle of attack, increases CL • Hence L is increased • D = 1/2 ∞ V∞2 S [CD,0 + CL2/( e AR)] • CD,0is the zero lift drag (parasite) • CL2/( e AR) is the induced drag • e is the span efficiency factor • = (16 h / b)2 / [1 + (16 h / b)2 ] • b is the wingspan • h is the height of the wing above the ground
Wing Dihedral () • Wings are bent upward through an angle , called the dihedral angle • Dihedral provides lateral stability, i.e., an airplane in a bank will return to its equilibrium position • This is a result of the lift on the higher wing being less than the lift on the lower wing providing a restoring rolling moment
Drag of a Finite Wing D = Df+ Dp + Dw + Di D = total drag on wing Df = skin friction drag Dp = pressure drag due to flow separation Dw = wave drag (for transonic and supersonic flows) Di = Induced drag (drag due to lift)
Drag of a Wing(Continued) • Induced drag - drag due to lift • Parasite drag - drag due to non-lifting surfaces • Profile drag • Skin friction • Pressure drag (“Form drag”) • Interference drag (e.g., wing-fuselage, wing-pylon)
High Lift Devices • No flap • Plain flap • Split flap • L. E. slat • Single slotted flap • Double-slotted flap • Double-slotted flap with slat • Double-slotted flap with slat and boundary layer suction • Not shown - Fowler flap
Maximum Lift Coefficient ComparisonModern vs. Conventional Airfoils
What’s Next on the Agenda • Boeing 787 Dreamliner Boeing 787
What’s Next on the Agenda • Boeing Blended Wing-Body Configuration Boeing 797
Concluding Remarks • What was not discussed • Transonic flow • Drag-divergence Mach number • Supersonic flow • Wave drag • Swept wings • Compressibility effects • Boundary layer theory • The history of aerodynamics
Airbus 380 Interior Good aerodynamics results in improved creature comforts
Winglets • Reduced induced drag • Equivalent to extending wingspan 1/2 of winglet height • Less wing bending moment and less wing weight than extending wing • Hinders spanwise flow and pressure drop at the wing tip • Looks modern/esthetically pleasing Boeing 737 Winglet