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AE1303 AERODYNAMICS -II. ONE DIMENSIONAL COMPRESSIBLE FLOW. Continuity Equation for steady flow. ONE DIMENSIONAL COMPRESSIBLE FLOW. EULER EQUATION. For steady flow. ONE DIMENSIONAL COMPRESSIBLE FLOW. Momentum Equation. Energy Equation. Oblique Shock Waves.
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ONE DIMENSIONAL COMPRESSIBLE FLOW • Continuity Equation for steady flow
ONE DIMENSIONAL COMPRESSIBLE FLOW • EULER EQUATION For steady flow
ONE DIMENSIONAL COMPRESSIBLE FLOW Momentum Equation Energy Equation
Oblique Shock Waves • The oblique shock waves typically occurs when a supersonic flow is turned to itself by a wall or its equivalent boundary condition. • All the streamlines have the same deflection angle q at the shock wave, parallel to the surface downstream. • Across the oblique shock, M decreases but p, T and r increase.
Expansion Waves • The expansion waves typically occur when a supersonic flow is turned away from itself by a wall or its equivalent boundary condition. • The streamlines are smoothly curved through the expansion fan until they are all parallel to the wall behind the corner point. • All flow properties through an expansion wave change smoothly and continuously. Across the expansion wave, M increases while p, T, and r decreases.
Source of Oblique Waves • For an object moving at a supersonic speed, the object is always ahead of the sound wave fronts generated by the object. This cause the sound wave fronts to coalesce into a line disturbance, called Mach wave, at the Mack angle m relative to the direction of the beeper. • The physical mechanism to form the oblique shock wave is essentially the same as the Mach wave. The Mach wave is actually an infinitely weak shock wave.
Oblique Shock Relations • The oblique shock tilts at a wave angle b with respect to V1, the upstream velocity. Behind the shock, the flow is deflected toward the shock by the flow deflection angle q. Let u and w denote the normal and parallel flow velocity components relative to the oblique shock and Mn and Mt the corresponding Mach numbers, we have for a steady adiabatic flow with no body forces the following relations:
Oblique Shock Relations (contd.) • So and Mn1 and Mn2 all satisfy the corresponding normal shock relations, which are all functions of M1 and b, because
Oblique Shock Relations (contd.)θ-β-M relation • For any given free stream Mach number M1, there is • a maximum q beyond which the shock will be detached. • For any given M1 and q < qmax, there are two b’s. The • larger b is called the strong shock solution, where M2 is • subsonic. The lower b is called the weak shock solution, • where M2 is supersonic except for a small region near • qmax. • 3. If q =0, then b = p/2 (normal shock) or b= m (Mach wave).
Straight Oblique Shock Relations (contd.) • For a calorically perfect gas,
Supersonic Flow Over Cones • The flow over a cone is inherently three-dimensional. The three-dimensionality has the relieving effect to result in a weaker shock wave as compared to a wedge of the same half angle. • The flow between the shock and the cone is no longer uniform; the streamlines there are curved and the surface pressure are not constant.
Shock Wave Reflection • Consider an incident oblique shock on a lower wall that is reflected by the upper wall at point. The reflection angle of the shock at the upper wall is determined by two conditions: (a) M2 < M1 (b) The flow downstream of the reflected shock wave must be parallel to the upper wall. That is, the flow is deflected downward by q.
Pressure-Deflection Diagram • The pressure-deflection diagram is a plot of the static pressure behind an oblique shock versus the flow deflection angle for a given upstream condition. • For left-running waves, the flow deflection angle is upward; it is considered as positive. For right-running waves, the flow deflection angle is downward; it is considered as negative.
Intersection of Shock Waves of Opposite Families • Consider the intersection of left- and right-running shocks (A and B). The two shocks intersect at E and result in two refracted shocks C and D. Since the shock wave strengths of A and B in general are different, there is a slip line in the region between the two refracted waves where (a) the pressure is continuous but the entropy is discontinuous at the slip line; (b) the velocities on two sides of the slip line are in the same direction but of different magnitudes;
Intersection of Shock Waves of the Same Family • As two left running oblique shock waves A and B intersect at C , they will form a single shock wave CD and a reflected shock wave CE such that there is slip line in the region between CD and CE.
Prandtl-Meyer Expansion Waves • M2 > M1. An expansion corner is a means to increase the flow mach number. • P2/p1 <1, r2/r1 <1, T2/T1 < 1. The pressure, density, and temperature decrease through an expansion wave. • The expansion fan is a continuous expansion region, composed of of an infinite number of Mach waves, bounded upstream by m1 and downstream by m2.
Prandtl-Meyer Expansion Waves (contd.) Centered expansion fan is also called Prandtl-Meyer expansion wave. where m1 = sin-1(1/M1) and m2 = sin-1(1/M2). • Streamlines through an expansion wave are smooth curved lines. • Since the expansion takes place through a continuous succession of Mach waves, and ds = 0 for each wave, the expansion is isentropic.
Prandtl-Meyer Expansion Waves (contd.) • For perfect gas, the Prandtl-Meyer expansion waves are governed by • Knowing M1 and q2, we can find M2
Prandtl-Meyer Expansion Waves (contd.) • Since the expansion is isentropic, and hence To and Po are constant, we have
Shock-Expansion Method-Flow Conditions Downstream of the Trailing Edge • In supersonic flow, the conditions at the trailing edge cannot affect the flow upstream. Therefore, unlike the subsonic flow, there is no need to impose a Kutta condition at the trailing edge in order to determine the airfoil lift. • However, if there is an interest to know the flow conditions downstream of the T.E., they can be determined by requiring the pressures downstream of the top- and bottom-surface flows to be equal.
Conditions Downstream of the T.E.-An Example • For the case shown, the angle of attack is less than the wedge’s half angle so we expect two oblique shocks at the trailing edge. • In order to know the flow conditions downstream of the airfoil, we start a guess value of the deflection angle g of the downstream flow relative of the free stream. • Knowing the Mach number and static pressure immediately upstream of each shock leads to the prediction of the static pressures downstream of each shock. • Then through the iteration process, g is changed until the pressures downstream of the top- and bottom-surface flow become equal.
Total and Perturbation Velocity Potentials • Consider a slender body immersed in an inviscid, irrotational flow where We can define the (total) velocity potential F and the perturbation velocity potential f as follows:
Velocity Potential Equation • For a steady, irrotational flow, starting from the differential continuity equation we have In terms of the velocity potential F(x,y,z), the above continuity equation becomes
Linearized Velocity Potential Equation • By assuming small velocity perturbations such that we can prove that for the Mach number ranges excluding the transonic range: the hypersonic range:
Linearized Pressure Coefficient • For calorically perfect gas, the pressure coefficient Cp can be reduce to For small velocity perturbations, we can prove that Note that the linearized Cp only depends on u’.
Prandtl-Glauert Rule for Linearized Subsonic Flow (2-D Over Thin Airfoils)
Cp of 2-D Supersonic Flows Around Thin Wings • For supersonic flow over any 2-D slender airfoil, where q is the local surface inclination with respect to the free stream:
Cl of 2-D Supersonic Flow Over Thin Wings • For supersonic flow over any 2-D slender airfoil,
Cm of 2-D Supersonic Flow Over Thin Wings • For supersonic flow over any 2-D slender airfoil, the pitching moment coefficient with respect to an arbitrary point xo is • The center of pressure for a symmetrical airfoil in supersonic flow is predicted at the mid-chord point.