Minor Independent Surfaces Print

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Minor independent surfaces

Aircraft may have additional minor aerodynamic surfaces. Some of these are treated as part of the overall wing
configuration:

 Winglet: a small fin at the wingtip, usually turned upwards. Reduces the size of vortices shed by the wingtip,
and hence also tip drag.
 Strake: a small surface, typically longer than it is wide and mounted on the fuselage. Strakes may be
located at various positions in order to improve aerodynamic behaviour. Leading edge root extensions
(LERX) are also sometimes referred to as wing strakes.
 Chine: long, narrow sideways extension to the fuselage, blending into the main wing. As well as improving
low speed (high angle of attack) handling, provides extra lift at supersonic speeds for minimal increase in
drag. Seen on the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird.
 Moustache: small high-aspect-ratio canard surface having no movable control surface. Typically is
retractable for high speed flight. Deflects air downward onto the wing root, to delay the stall. Seen on the
Dassault Milan.

Additional minor features


Additional minor features may be applied to an existing aerodynamic surface such as the main wing:

High lift
High-lift devices maintain lift at low speeds and delay the stall to allow slower takeoff and landing speeds:

 Slat and slot: A Leading edge slat is a small aerofoil extending in front of the main leading edge. The
spanwise gap behind it forms a leading-edge slot. Air flowing up through the slot is deflected backwards by
the slat to flow over the wing, allowing the aircraft to fly at lower air speeds without flow separation or
stalling. A slat may be fixed or retractable.

 Flap: a hinged aerodynamic surface, usually on the trailing edge, which is rotated downwards to generate
extra lift and drag. Types include plain, slotted, and split. Some, such as Fowler Flaps, also extend
rearwards to increase wing area. The Krueger flap is a leading-edge device.

 Cuff: modifies the aerofoil section, typically to improve low-speed characteristics.


Spanwise flow control
On a swept wing, air tends to flow sideways as well as backwards and reducing this can improve the efficiency of the
wing:

 Wing fence: a flat plate extending along the wing chord and for a short distance vertically. Used to control
spanwise airflow over the wing.

 Dogtooth leading edge: creates a sharp discontinuity in the airflow over the wing, disrupting spanwise flow.

 Notched leading edge: acts like a dogtooth.

fig

fig :Spanwise flow control device

Vortex creation
Vortex devices maintain airflow at low speeds and delay the stall, by creating a vortex which re-energises the
boundary layer close to the wing.

 Vortex generator: small triangular protrusion on the upper leading wing surface; usually, several are
spaced along the span of the wing. Vortex generators create additional drag at all speeds.

 Vortilon: a flat plate attached to the underside of the wing near its outer leading edge, roughly parallel to
normal airflow. At low speeds, tip effects cause a local spanwise flow which is deflected by the vortilon to
form a vortex passing up and over the wing.

 Leading-edge root extension (LERX): generates a strong vortex over the wing at high
angles of attack, but unlike vortex generators it can also increase lift at such high angles, while creating minimal drag
in level flight.

Fig: Vortex devices fig: Drag-reduction devices

Drag reduction
Anti-shock body: a streamlined pod shape added to the leading or trailing edge of an aerodynamic surface, to delay
the onset of shock stall and reduce transonic wave drag. Examples include the Küchemann carrots on the wing
trailing edge of the Handley Page Victor B.2.

Fillet: a small curved infill at the junction of two surfaces, such as a wing and fuselage, blending them smoothly
together to reduce drag.

Fairings of various kinds, such as blisters, pylons and wingtip pods, containing equipment which cannot fit inside the
wing, and whose only aerodynamic purpose is to reduce the drag created by the equipment.

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