Aerodynamics
Aerodynamics
Aerodynamics
1
Kutta-Joukowski Lift Theorem and Conditions
Kutta (German), Joukowski (Russia)
• It is a fundamental theorem in aerodynamics, that can be used for the
calculation of the lift of an airfoil on the 2D body including circular cylinder.
• It state that, “ lift per unit depth or span of any cylinder or airfoil immersed in
uniform flow stream is equal to ”
positive clockwise
: total net circulation contained
i.e. within the body shape
2
AIRFOIL NOMENCLATURE
• Mean Chamber Line: Set of points halfway between upper and lower surfaces
– Measured perpendicular to mean chamber line itself
• Leading Edge: Most forward point of mean chamber line
• Trailing Edge: Most reward point of mean chamber line
• Chord Line: Straight line connecting the leading and trailing edges
• Chord, c: Distance along the chord line from leading to trailing edge
• Camber: Maximum distance between mean chamber line and chord line
– Measured perpendicular to chord line
3
NACA FOUR-DIGIT SERIES
• First digit specifies maximum camber in percentage of chord
• Second digit indicates position of maximum camber in tenths of chord
• Last two digits provide maximum thickness of airfoil in percentage of chord
NACA 2415
Example: NACA 2415
• Airfoil has maximum thickness of 15%
of chord (0.15c)
• Camber of 2% (0.02c) located 40%
back from airfoil leading edge (0.4c)
4
Kutta–Joukowski condition/hypothesis …cont’d
Statement of Kutta conditions:
5
…cont’d
• Different possible shape of the trailing edge and their relation
to the Kutta condition.
If the TE angle is finite then the TE is stagnation point
If the trailing edge is cusped, the velocity leaving the top and
bottom surface at the TE are finite and equal;
6
…cont’d
If the value of around the airfoil is such that the flow leaves the
trailing edge smoothly.
7
Force and Moments of immersed body …cont’d
Any body of any shape when immersed in a fluid stream (uniform flow)
will experience forces and moments from the flow.
If the body has arbitrary shape and orientation, the flow will exert forces
and moments about all three coordinate axes, as shown in Fig.
8
…cont’d
The force on the body along this axis is called drag, and the moment about
that axis the rolling moment.
o The drag is essentially a flow loss and must be overcome if the body is to
move against the stream.
A second and very important force is perpendicular to the drag and usually
performs a useful job, such as bearing the weight of the body. It is called the
lift.
o The moment about the lift axis is called yaw.
The third component, neither a loss nor a gain, is the side force, and
about this axis is the pitching moment.
9
Lift and Drag Concept
When any body moves through a fluid, an interaction between the body and
the fluid occurs; this effect can be given in terms of the forces at the fluid–
body interface.
These forces Aerodynamic forces exerted by airflow comes from only two
sources:
1. Pressure, p, distribution on surface
• Acts normal to surface
2. Shear stress, τw, (friction) on surface
• Acts tangentially to surface
Pressure and shear are in units of force per unit area (N/m 2)
Net unbalance creates an aerodynamic force
10
…cont’d
“No matter how complex the flow field, and no matter how complex the shape of
the body, the only way nature has of communicating an aerodynamic force to a
solid object or surface is through the pressure and shear stress distributions that
exist on the surface.”
“But, generally in the case of blunt bodies, the force will neither be parallel nor
perpendicular to the surface. The force can be resolved into two components one
parallel to the flow and the other perpendicular to the flow. The former may be
called shear force and the other, the pressure force.
11
Resolving the Aerodynamic Force
Relative Wind: Direction of V∞
We use subscript ∞ to indicate far upstream conditions
Angle of Attack, α: Angle between relative wind (V∞) and chord line
Center of pressure: The point on the body about which the aerodynamic
moment is zero.
Total aerodynamic force, R, can be resolved into two force components
– Lift, L: Component of aerodynamic force perpendicular to relative wind
– Drag, D: Component of aerodynamic force parallel to relative wind
V∞ 12
…cont’d
•
13
…cont’d
•
14
…cont’d
Defining coefficient of drag, as the ratio of dynamic pressure it is seen that:
𝐷𝑟𝑎𝑔
𝐶 𝐷= 2
1/ 2 𝜌 𝐴 𝑈
Lift coefficient,
𝐿𝑖𝑓𝑡
𝐶 𝐿= 2
1/2 𝜌 𝐴𝑈
Where. A is characteristics area which may differ depend up on the body shape.
Frontal area, the body as seen from the stream; suitable for thick, stubby
bodies, such as spheres, cylinders, cars, missiles, projectiles, and
torpedoes.
Planform area, the body area as seen from above; suitable for wide, flat
bodies such as wings and hydrofoils.
Wetted area, customary for surface ships and barges. 15
…cont’d
• Table below, gives a few data on drag, based on frontal area, of two
16
…cont’d
17
…cont’d
• The drag of some representative wide-span (nearly two-dimensional) bodies is
shown versus the Reynolds number in Fig.
18
Aerodynamic Forces on Road Vehicles …cont’d
• The historical trend for drag coefficients for automobiles and trucks.
19
TRUCK SPOILER EXAMPLE
• Note ‘messy’ or
turbulent flow pattern
• High drag
• Lower fuel efficiency
• Spoiler angle
increased by + 5°
• Flow behavior more
closely resembles a
laminar flow
• Tremendous savings
(< $10,000/yr)
20
FLOW SEPARATION
• Key to understanding: Friction causes flow separation within boundary layer
• Separation then creates another form of drag called pressure drag due to
separation
21
Friction (Viscous) Effects on Drag
• Friction has two effects:
1. Skin friction due to shear stress at wall
2. Pressure drag due to flow separation
D D friction D pressure
Total drag due to Drag due to Drag due to
= +
viscous effects skin friction separation
Called Profile Drag
22
AIRFOIL STALL
• Key to understanding: Friction causes flow separation within boundary layer
1. B.L. either laminar or turbulent
2. All laminar B.L. → turbulent B.L.
3. Turbulent B.L. ‘fuller’ than laminar B.L., more resistant to separation
• Separation creates another form of drag called pressure drag due to separation
– Dramatic loss of lift and increase in drag
23
SAMPLE DATA
• Lift coefficient (or lift) linear
variation with angle of attack, a
– Cambered airfoils have
Lift (for now)
What is stall?
25
… cont’d
26
HOW DOES AN AIRFOIL GENERATE LIFT?
• Lift due to imbalance of pressure distribution over top and bottom surfaces of
airfoil (or wing)
– If pressure on top is lower than pressure on bottom surface, lift is generated
– Why is pressure lower on top surface?
Lift = PA
27
HOW DOES AN AIRFOIL GENERATE LIFT?
Streamtube A is squashed
most in nose region
(ahead of maximum thickness)
A
B
29
HOW DOES AN AIRFOIL GENERATE LIFT?
2. As V ↑ p↓ 1
– Incompressible: Bernoulli’s Equation p V 2 constant
2
– Compressible: Euler’s Equation
– Called Bernoulli Effect
dp VdV
3. With lower pressure over upper surface and higher pressure over bottom surface,
airfoil feels a net force in upward direction → Lift
Most of lift is produced
in first 20-30% of wing
(just downstream of leading edge)
30
MORE DEFINITIONS
• Total aerodynamic force on airfoil is summation of F1 and F2
• Lift is obtained when F2 > F1
• Misalignment of F1 and F2 creates Moments, M, which tend to rotate airfoil/wing
– A moment (torque) is a force times a distance
– Pressure distribution in aerodynamic literature often given as Cp
p p p p
Cp
q 1
V2
2
Pressure Distribution
31
… cont’d
An airfoil produce lift when moves in relative to air, that makes an airplane fly.
How does this lift produced?
the airfoil produces a downwash as shown. This cause the pressure
difference b/n the top and bottom of an airfoil and hence produce lift.
The higher the angle of attack the greater will be the down wash the airfoil
lift force.
A greater air speed also increase the lift force significantly.
32
… cont’d
COANDA EFFECT: the tendency of a fluid particles to get attached to a
convex Surface or top airfoil section as shown.
34
EXAMPLE: BOEING 727 FLAPS/SLATS
35
Summary on lift
36
Summary on lift …..cont’d
Basically the introduction of aerodynamics is about the flow curve.
This curvature generate pressure difference and the lift .
38
Finite Wing Theory
39
Finite Wing Theory
Lift for a Finite Wing
All real wings are finite in span (airfoils are considered as infinite in the
span)
And, all real wings have tips and are therefore :Taper
of finite span
ratio = or finite aspect
ratio AR, defined by:
Planform area S
40
AIRFOILS VERSUS WINGS
High AR
Aspect Ratio
b: wingspan
S: wing area
2
b Low AR
AR
S
b
…cont’d
Low Pressure
Low Pressure
High Pre r es s ure
ssure High P
43
Finite Wing Downwash …cont’d
Wing tip vortices induce a small downward component of air velocity near
wing by dragging surrounding air with them.
Downward component of velocity is called downwash, w
Chord line
• Two Consequences:
1. Increase in drag, called induced drag (drag due to lift)
2. Angle of attack is effectively reduced, aeff as compared with V∞
44
Wing Tip Vortices …cont’d
This creates a swirling motion off the wing tip called a vortex
45
Angle of Attack Definitions
Cho
rd line
Relative Wind, V∞ ageometric
ageometric: what you see, what you would see in a wind tunnel
o Simply look at angle between incoming relative wind and chord line
ageometric: what you see, what you would see in a wind tunnel
Simply look at angle between incoming relative wind and chord line
Relative Wind, V∞
Induced Drag, Di
V∞
eff
Infinite Wing
Finite Wing
(Appendix D)
C L cl
C D cd
HOW TO ESTIMATE INDUCED DRAG
Di L sin i
Di L i
CL
i
AR
CL C L2
Di L i L q S
AR AR
Key Results:
Di C L2
Elliptical Lift Distribution
q S AR
C L2
C D ,i
AR
ELLIPTICAL LIFT DISTRIBUTION
• For a wing with same airfoil shape across span and no twist, an elliptical lift
distribution is characteristic of an elliptical wing plan form
• Example: Supermarine Spitfire
Key Results:
Elliptical Lift Distribution
CL
i
AR
C L2
C D ,i
AR
HOW TO ESTIMATE INDUCED DRAG
• For all wings in general
• Define a span efficiency factor, e (also called span efficiency factor)
• Elliptical planforms, e = 1
– The word planform means shape as view by looking down on the wing
• For all other planforms, e < 1
• 0.85 < e < 0.99
2
C
C D ,i L Goes with square of CL
Inversely related to AR
eAR Drag due to lift
cd {
EXAMPLE: U2 VS. F-15
1 2 C L2
L W V SC L C D cd
2 eAR
U2 F-15
• Cruise at 70,000 ft • Flies at high speed (and lower
– Air density highly reduced altitudes), so high q∞ → low
• Flies at slow speeds, low q∞ → angle of attack, low CL
high angle of attack, high CL • F-15 AR ~ 3 (WHY?)
• U2 AR ~ 14.3 (WHY?)
EXAMPLE: U2 SPYPLANE
C L2
C D cd
eAR
• Cruise at 70,000 ft
– Out of USSR missile range
– Air density, r∞, highly
reduced
• In steady-level flight, L = W
1 2
L W V SC L
2
• As r∞ reduced, CL must
increase (angle of attack must
increase)
• AR ↑ CD ↓
• U2 AR ~ 14.3
U2 stall speed at altitude is only ten knots (18 km/h) less than its maximum speed
EXAMPLE: F-15 EAGLE
2
C
C D cd L
eAR
• Flies at high speed at low
angle of attack → low CL
• Induced drag < Profile Drag
• Low AR, Low S
1 2
L W V SC L
2
FINITE WING CHANGE IN LIFT SLOPE
Infinite Wing • In a wind tunnel, the easiest thing to
measure is the geometric angle of attack
ageom= aeff + ai
Summary: Infinite Vs. Finite Wings
Properties of a finite wing differ in two major respects from infinite wings:
1) Addition of induced drag
2) Lift curve for a finite wing has smaller slope than corresponding lift curve
for infinite wing with same airfoil cross section
Induced drag is price you pay for generation of lift
CD,i proportional to CL2
– Airplane on take-off or landing, induced drag major component
– Significant at cruise (15-25% of total drag)
CD,i inversely proportional to AR
– Desire high AR to reduce induced drag
– Compromise between structures and aerodynamics
– AR important tool as designer (more control than span efficiency, e)
For an elliptic lift distribution, chord must vary elliptically along span
– Wing planform is elliptical
– Elliptical lift distribution gives good approximation for arbitrary finite wing
through use of span efficiency factor, e
SUMMARY
• Induced drag is price you pay for generation of lift
• For an elliptic lift distribution, chord must vary elliptically along span
– Wing planform is elliptical
– Elliptical lift distribution gives good approximation for arbitrary finite wing
through use of span efficiency factor, e
End of Chapter
Thank you!