Курсовая работа: Airfoils and Lift
It
will however present certain new features as well of far reaching importance:
(a) A double or triple keel giving added longitudinal strength comparable to
the breaking strength of one length of metal, as against two or three bolted
together; (b) a new type of ring girder each internally braced and structurally
self sufficient, which (c) will permit the control car and even the power cars
to be built within the hull; (d) even fuller accessiblity to continuous
inspection and permitting repairs to be made even in flight; (e) the use of new
fuels to conserve helium and reduce weight.
Army Non-Rigid Dirigibles. The non-rigid dirigible is the smallest of the
three types as the largest now being built in the United States for the Army
and Navy service have a gas capacity of about one-tenth that of the Los
Angeles. Under ordinary conditions a 230,000 cubic foot non-rigid has a
cruising radius of from 500 to 1,000 miles and an air endurance of from 18 to
24 hours. Such airships are essentially motorized free balloons and the engines
are carried in a car attached to the lower side or bottom of the bag. The
Pilgrim, a small non-rigid previously described with a gas capacity of 50,000
cubic feet has a speed of 50 miles per hour and is propelled by a Wright
"Gale" three-cylinder engine as shown at Fig. 323. This small ship
was built to carry four passengers. The gas in non-rigid ships, as in the army
TC types, as shown at Fig. 324 is contained in a single bag, but an inner two
compartment bag, called the ballonet, is filled with air to keep the main
container properly distended because the air pressure can be made to compensate
for variations in gas pressure in the bag. These ships have a capacity of about
200,000 cubic feet, are 196 feet long overall and 47 feet in extreme height.
The hull diameter is 33.5 feet. The fineness ratio is 4.4 to 1. The total lift
is 11,584 pounds of which the useful lift is about 4,000 pounds. The gross
weight per horsepower is 38.6 pounds. Two Wright Type I water-cooled engines of
150 horsepower each were provided on the first ships of this series but these
have been replaced on later types with two Wright J1 engines, which are nine-cylinder
radial air-cooled types driving tractor propellers 9 feet 10 inches in
diameter. It is claimed that the saving of 400 pounds over the water-cooled
installation permits an increase of speed from 54 to 60 miles per hour; with an
increase in range of 10 per cent.
Flight
Control Surfaces - Elevons
Delta
winged aircraft use elevons as primary flight controls for
roll and
pitch.
Elevon:
Delta
winged aircraft can not use conventional 3 axis flight control systems because
of their unique delta shape. Therefore, it uses a device called an elevon. It
is a combination of ailerons and elevators.
The
elevon is used as an aileron. Ailerons control motion along the longitudinal
axis. The longitudinal axis is an imaginary line that runs from the nose to the
tail. Motion about the longitudinal axis is called roll.
The
elevon is also used as an elevator. Elevators control motion along the lateral
axis. The lateral axis is an imaginary line that extends crosswise, from
wingtip to wingtip. Motion
about the lateral axis is called pitch.
Fokker DR.I - Thoughts on Wing
Failures |
by Mike Tate
© 2000
|
The recent
WWI AERO article (#165, Aug, 1999) concerning wing failures in the Nieuport
28 prompted me to put some ideas to paper, regarding those more familiar
failures of the Fokker triplane.
The
reputation of Fokker aircraft for fragility was mainly the result of
structural problems with the Dr.I triplane and D.VIII cantilever monoplane.
The D.VIII wing problem was due to flexural failure (ie, they broke in
bending); and the evidence indicates that this was due to production
quality-control inadequacies rather than deficiencies of design or technical
understanding. The Dr.I, however, is a different "kettle of fish"
in that it experienced failures very like those of the Nieuport 28, namely
that of "wing stripping." Unlike the D.VIII, the triplane was
grounded not because of spar failure, but because of the disintegration of
the secondary structure- wing ribs etc- whilst the spars remained intact. The
similarity of the failures in the N28 and Dr.I is intriguing because the 2
aircraft are fundamentally different: one a biplane of almost sesquiplane
proportions, the other a triplane of equal-chord wings. The N28 had
thin-section wings, wire-braced; the Dr.I had thick sections and a cantilever
structure very different animals. For me, the most interesting fact of all
(and the most difficult to explain) has been that the failures always
occurred in the upper wings of either aircraft - to my knowledge there are no
reported incidents of failures in the lower planes.
In the case
of the 2 most notable triplane failures, the extent of the upper
wingstripping was almost total, with fatal consequences for Lieutenants
Gontermann and Pastor. It is of particular interest that, after the triplane
was reissued with modified wings, the same type of failure still occurred -
but to a more limited (and survivable) extent.
At the time
of the Dr.I grounding, after the 2 crashes mentioned, various theories were
proposed to account for the failures. Sand loading of the Fokker F5 (the Dr.I
prototype) had shown that the triplane cantilever wing cellule had excellent
strength for its period; and it fell to those interested to create new (and
unlikely) aerodynamic phenomena to account for the fatal discrepancy between
experiment and practice. Because the ailerons of both Gontermann's and
Pastor's aircraft were seen to detach, interest centered on the aileron
supporting-structure and related internal componentry.
Various
reinforcements were introduced, and emphasis was placed on better internal
protection of the glued structure by varnishing. (The peculiarity of upper
wing failures had not, of course, gone unnoticed at the time. The possibility
of the casein glue deteriorating, due to weathering, gave cause for concern -
the lower wings being considered to be somewhat protected - debatable, of
course.) Also poor workmanship was extensively uncovered in grounded aircraft
and Fokker was urged to improve on this aspect of his production of further
aircraft. However, as noted, failures continued to occur in the reissued
aircraft.
|
In the case of
the Nieuport 28, the fabric of the upper-wing top-surface together with the
entire leading edge would detach. On this aircraft, however, damage appears to
have been selflimiting at this point: the rib tails and undersurface, for
instance, always seem to have held up. This is just as well for the pilots
concerned, since the (almost) sesquiplane proportions of the N28 could not have
tolerated complete loss of the upper lifting area. Fortunately, the Nieuport
carried its ailerons on the lower plane so that roll control was available - no
doubt this helped survivability.
Of all WWI
aircraft, these 2 are the only ones I am aware of that suffered this type of
failure as a generic fault. "Ballooning" of wing fabric was a known
risk resulting from wing leading-edge damage. Wings failed simply through lack
of strength. Wings failed due to a lack of stiffness. (True sesquiplanes-
V-strutters, notably other Nieuport and Albatros models- are known to have
occasionally lost a lower plane due to a lack of torsional stiffness) - but
wingstripping seems mainly recorded for the 2 models in question. Since wing
reinforcement better weather protection and better-built quality did not fully
cure the triplane ills, then there was another factor at work. So what was it?
I began by
looking for a common factor. What is it that both aircraft possess which can
cause almost identical failure in a wing- and why only the top plane? There are
in fact, 2 unusual structural features present in both. Firstly, the main spars
are very closely spaced so that the rib noses project unusually far forward of
the spar group. The N28 spars are closely spaced, but maintain an orthodox
drag-bracing arrangement of steel tube and piano wire. The Dr.I located the
spars with a small separation, so that plywood closing-skins top and bottom
formed a single-spar system, accounting for both drag and to a limited extent,
torsion.
The other
critical feature present in both aircraft was the use of a plywood leading-edge
contour panel. This was relatively unusual in WWI. British aircraft seem not to
have used it at all, preferring intermediate riblets as leading-edge support;
and from a quick appraisal of my library, I have identified only 5 aircraft
which had this feature (I don't suppose this to be at a definitive.). These are
the Pfalz D.XII Fokkers Dr.I, D.VI and D.VII, and the Nieuport 28 (possibly
also the 27).
Some aircraft
wings were, of course, totally skinned in sheet plywood or aluminum; but with
these exceptions, at least, complete fabric cover was the norm. The use of
plywood leading-edge covering presents a problem in the attachment of fabric
since stringing (ie, the through-wing stitching normally used) would be
required to stop at the plywood-covered surface. This may account for the fact
that both the triplane and N28 are reported as originally having the fabric
tacked to the rib flanges rather than being sewn (which was considered to be
the correct way). The fabric attachment itself is therefore suspect but the
test still remains; why only failures of the upper wing? If the fabric
attachment was the critical factor, then failures could have occurred in any
wing with this feature, which would have included lower planes of both the
triplane and the N28.
Both aircraft
have structurally suspect features in their wing leading-edges. In the case of
the N28, the long rib-noses would produce large bending stresses (during
violent manoeuvres) at their main-spar attachment locations. Large bending
stresses can have attendant large shear stresses; and on the N28, these would
exist in the thin poplar rib-webs (typical of the period). This is a very risky
arrangement, since timber is not particularly strong when subject to shear
loading along the grain - plywood is much better. (The N28 rib-noses had very
little shear material anyway)
The other
suspect feature is that of the omission of rib-capping referred to in the
recent WWI AERO article. These details appear peculiar to the N28, and are at
the most extreme in the upper wing. There is little doubt that the upper wing
leading edge was simply of marginal strength; and at first sight it seems odd that
sandloading did not reveal this weakness. But of course this reveals a weakness
of sand-loading. The chordwise distribution of lift, at high angles of attack,
will not normally be represented by a heap of sand, since dry sand slumps to
approximately 45 deg- forming a triangular load distribution with a
centrally-located center of gravity. (This can be modified within limits by
constructing walls along the wing edges.) Sandloading therefore successfully
tests the wingspar adequacy, but is insufficient to the task of testing the rib
nose strength (and remember that here we have 2 aircraft which resolutely held
on to their spars, whilst liberally shedding secondary structure). This
proof-loading problem is exacerbated by the fact that wing lift (particularly
at large angles of attack) is largely generated by the negative pressure zone
existing on the forward upper surface (see Fig 18- taken from SIMPLE
AERODYNAMICS (1929), by Charles N Monteith.).
The critical
structural requirement under these loading conditions is to have adequate
"peel" strength between the upper skin and the substructure (ribs
and/or stringers etc). Both the N28 and the Dr.I were deficient here. The
Nieuport was devoid of rib cap-strips or spanwise stringers at the critical
location; the Dr.I leading-edge plywood was severely cut away at each rib, had
no supporting stringers, and had only minor connection to the main spar. With
this arrangement, a significant amount of the local lift- would have been
transmitted in a peel condition from the plywood skin to the supporting ribs -
there was no other load-path. Again, this is a very unreliable form of joint.
Today, the attachment of wing skins to substructure remains a critical factor;
in fact, where fuel is carried inside a wing much of the wing design is
overridingly determined by this consideration.
So, the
Nieuport had a weak upper-wing leading edge and larger chord to boot. This
could (as suggested in the WWI AERO article) be the complete answer to the N28
failures. But the Triplane had the same design condition on all wings, but only
the top wing ever failed. So there was something else.
It is not
common to see a biplane or triplane wing cellule in which equal-chord wings are
of differing span, although some famous aircraft such as the BE- 12, RE-8 and
Curtiss Jenny are exceptions. Typically, where an upper wing is of greater
span, it is often of greater chord also. This has the virtue of approximately
maintaining constant aspect-ratio for each wing in the complete wing system.
(To what extent this represented a design objective at the time I have no
information.)
The fact that
real wings are of finite span (as opposed to the theoretically infinite span
wing which is implicit in aerofoil section data) means that a real wing will
attain a particular lift coefficient at an angle of attack somewhat greater
than that apparent from he section-data. It also follows that wings of
differing aspect ratio, but identical section, will generate different
lift-intensities, to one another, when operating at the same angle of attack.
The Dr.1 had
aspect ratios of 6.8, 5.9 and 5.1 for the upper, middle and lower planes
respectively. The wing section (tested as the Gottingen 289 section after the war)
had a maximum lift coefficient of about 1.4. Making estimates for each of the
triplane wings (working as independent surfaces), the planes would require
19.2, 20 and 21 degrees respectively to reach the maximum lift coefficient.
When working at the same angle of attack (as in the aircraft alignment), the
upper wing would produce a lift intensity about 9% greater than the lower wing.
So could aspect-ratio be the cause of the Triplane wing failures? Well no, I am
afraid not. A 9% increased lift intensity cannot be considered sufficient to
always fail the upper wing before one or the other planes. Variations in
material strength and build quality would both have similar (or greater)
tolerance, which would occasionally bias the failure to one of the other planes.
There has to be something else – something more emphatic.
I found the
answer by chance, and I found it in a ‘history’ book. Whilst flipping through a
copy of SIMPLE AERODYNAMICS (1929), by Charles N Monteith, (Chief Engineer,
Boeing), looking for data on the Gottingen 289 section, I came across a
particularly relevant passage under Item 70, p89, “Pressure distribution tests
on MB-3A Airplane”, which is reproduced in facsimile here:
Paragraphs B
and C are telling. The loading distribution noted is very significant over the
biplane system described. A factor of 1.6 at high-lift coefficients cannot be
ignored. The Triplane system with its relatively smaller wing gaps and
pronounced stagger would almost certainly have a greater value than this.
Together with aspect-ratio effects it is not unreasonable to suggest that the
lift intensity of the upper wing of the Dr.I approached twice that of the
bottom wing. This is certainly enough to test the upper wing integrity before
the rest of the system.
Conclusion
I would
suggest that the Dr.I wing failures (and almost certainly those of the N28,
too) occurred because lift-grading (particularly), together with aspect-ratio
effects, caused the upper surface of the upper wing to be subject to much
greater lift intensity than the rest of the system. This tested a leading-edge
design of marginal strength, poorly made, to the point of collapse in
particular aircraft. The leading edge failure continued back across the wing
due to design details. Where rib tails, for example, were connected by a wire
trailing edge, ballooning fabric will exert tensile loading in this wire which
will then tend to "gather up" the rib tails and strip the wing. This
would also destabilize the area of the aileron support structures, and so on.
The strengthening of the wing aft of the spars and the improvements to build
quality, carried out after the original failures, would have acted to prevent
this catastrophic failure. But the root cause of the failure lift-grading) went
unappreciated until after the war when investigations like those at NACA were
conducted.
It would be
fascinating to know to what extent these factors were understood prior to 1918.
I expect that the concentration of lift forces (as an intense negative pressure
zone at the upper surface LE) was reasonably well appreciated by wind-tunnel
investigators- if only by the application of Bernoulli's theorem to the visible
flow patterns around test sections. Probably the effects of aspect ratio were
understood- even if only qualitatively; but lift-grading would require much
more complex investigation. Regarding the aspect-ratio issue; advocates of
multiplanes (Horatio Phillips, for example) appear to have worked from the
understanding that high aspect-ratio is a "good thing" (true) but not
to have had evidence of the detrimental effects of interference between
closely-spaced multi-plane wing systems.
But such is
the nature of progress - the testing of ideas. It took the lives of airmen to
drive the investigations which led to today's understanding of these matters
and which allow our complacent and sometimes arrogant review of history.
A final
thought. It is theoretically possible for the Fokker triplane to remain
airborne on its 2 lower planes alone (of 9.9 square metres area). The stall
speed would be about 64mph. No doubt, when both Gontermann and Pastor found
themselves in dire straits, they did the natural thing: to pull back on the
stick even though the aircraft was deeply stalled. Maybe if they had first pushed... ?
Forces Acting on an Airplane
The
airplane in straight-and-level unaccelerated flight is acted on by four forces.
The four forces are lift, gravity, thrust and drag.
The airplane
in straight-and-level unaccelerated flight is acted on by four forces--lift,
the upward acting force; weight, or gravity, the downward acting force; thrust,
the forward acting force; and drag, the backward acting, or retarding force of
wind resistance.
Lift
opposes gravity.
Thrust
opposes drag.
Drag and
weight are forces inherent in anything lifted from the earth and moved through
the air. Thrust and lift are artificially created forces used to overcome the
forces of nature and enable an airplane to fly. The engine and propeller
combination is designed to produce thrust to overcome drag. The wing is
designed to produce lift to overcome the weight (or gravity).
In
straight-and-level, unaccelerated flight, (Straight-and-level flight is
coordinated flight at a constant altitude and heading) lift equals weight and
thrust equals drag, though lift and weight will not equal thrust and drag. Any
inequality between lift and weight will result in the airplane entering a climb
or descent. Any inequality between thrust and drag while maintaining
straight-and-level flight will result in acceleration or deceleration until the
two forces become balanced.
Flight
Control Surfaces
The three
primary flight controls are the ailerons, elevator and rudder.
Ailerons: The two ailerons, one at
the outer trailing edge of each wing, are movable surfaces that control
movement about the longitudinal axis. The movement is roll. Lowering the
aileron on one wing raises the aileron on the other. The wing with the lowered
aileron goes up because of its increased lift, and the wing with the raised
aileron goes down because of its decreased lift. Thus, the effect of moving
either aileron is aided by the simultaneous and opposite movement of the
aileron on the other wing.
Rods or cables
connect the ailerons to each other and to the control wheel (or stick) in the
cockpit. When pressure is applied to the right on the control wheel, the left
aileron goes down and the right aileron goes up, rolling the airplane to the
right. This happens because the down movement of the left aileron increases the
wing camber (curvature) and thus increases the angle of attack. The right
aileron moves upward and decreases the camber, resulting in a decreased angle
of attack. Thus, decreased lift on the right wing and increased lift on the
left wing cause a roll and bank to the right.
Elevators: The elevators control the
movement of the airplane about its lateral axis. This motion is pitch. The
elevators form the rear part of the horizontal tail assembly and are free to
swing up and down. They are hinged to a fixed surface--the horizontal
stabilizer. Together, the horizontal stabilizer and the elevators form a single
airfoil. A change in position of the elevators modifies the camber of the
airfoil, which increases or decreases lift.
Like the
ailerons, the elevators are connected to the control wheel (or stick) by
control cables. When forward pressure is applied on the wheel, the elevators
move downward. This increases the lift produced by the horizontal tail
surfaces. The increased lift forces the tail upward, causing the nose to drop.
Conversely, when back pressure is applied on the wheel, the elevators move
upward, decreasing the lift produced by the horizontal tail surfaces, or maybe
even producing a downward force. The tail is forced downward and the nose up.
The elevators
control the angle of attack of the wings. When back pressure is applied on the
control wheel, the tail lowers and the nose raises, increasing the angle of
attack. Conversely, when forward pressure is applied, the tail raises and the
nose lowers, decreasing the angle of attack.
Rudder: The rudder controls
movement of the airplane about its vertical axis. This motion is yaw. Like the
other primary control surfaces, the rudder is a movable surface hinged to a
fixed surface which, in this case, is the vertical stabilizer, or fin. Its
action is very much like that of the elevators, except that it swings in a
different plane--from side to side instead of up and down. Control cables
connect the rudder to the rudder pedals.
Trim Tabs: A trim tab is a small,
adjustable hinged surface on the trailing edge of the aileron, rudder, or elevator
control surfaces. Trim tabs are labor saving devices that enable the pilot to
release manual pressure on the primary controls.
Some airplanes
have trim tabs on all three control surfaces that are adjustable from the
cockpit; others have them only on the elevator and rudder; and some have them
only on the elevator. Some trim tabs are the ground-adjustable type only.
The tab is
moved in the direction opposite that of the primary control surface, to relieve
pressure on the control wheel or rudder control. For example, consider the
situation in which we wish to adjust the elevator trim for level flight.
("Level flight" is the attitude of the airplane that will maintain a
constant altitude.) Assume that back pressure is required on the control wheel
to maintain level flight and that we wish to adjust the elevator trim tab to
relieve this pressure. Since we are holding back pressure, the elevator will be
in the "up" position. The trim tab must then be adjusted downward so
that the airflow striking the tab will hold the elevators in the desired
position. Conversely, if forward pressure is being held, the elevators will be
in the down position, so the tab must be moved upward to relieve this pressure.
In this example, we are talking about the tab itself and not the cockpit
control.
Rudder and
aileron trim tabs operate on the same principle as the elevator trim tab to
relieve pressure on the rudder pedals and sideward pressure on the control
wheel, respectively.
Laminar
Flow Airfoil
Laminar
Flow is
the smooth, uninterrupted flow of air over the contour of the wings, fuselage,
or other parts of an aircraft in flight. Laminar flow is most often found at
the front of a streamlined body and is an important factor in flight. If the
smooth flow of air is interrupted over a wing section, turbulence is created
which results in a loss of lift and a high degree of drag. An airfoil designed
for minimum drag and uninterrupted flow of the boundary layer is called a
laminar airfoil.
The Laminar
flow theory dealt with the development of a symmetrical airfoil section which
had the same curvature on both the upper and lower surface. The design was
relatively thin at the leading edge and progressively widened to a point of
greatest thickness as far aft as possible. The theory in using an airfoil of
this design was to maintain the adhesion of the boundary layers of airflow
which are present in flight as far aft of the leading edge as possible. on
normal airfoils the boundary layer would be interrupted at high speeds and the
resultant break would cause a turbulent flow over the remainder of the foil.
This turbulence would be realized as drag up the point of maximum speed at
which time the control surfaces and aircraft flying characteristics would be
affected. The formation of the boundary layer is a process of layers of air
formed one next to the other, ie; the term laminar is derived from the
lamination principle involved.
History of
Laminar Flow The P-51 Mustang is the first aircraft every intentionally designed to
use laminar flow airfoils. However, wartime NACA research data I have shows
that Mustangs were not manufactured with a sufficient degree of surface quality
to maintain much laminar flow on the wing. The RAE found that the P-63, despite
being designed with laminar airfoils, also was not manufactured with sufficient
surface quality to have much laminar flow.
The Mustang
was a mathematically designed airplane and the wing foil that was to be
classified as a "semi-empirical venture" by the British was cleared
for adoption on the new design. The wing section would be the only part of the
fighter which would be tested in a wind tunnel prior to the first test flight.
Due to the speculation of the success of the radical foil, the engineering
department was committed to adopt a more conventional airfoil within thirty
days of the tests in the event the wing did not come up to specifications. A
one quarter scale model of the wing was designed and constructed for tests in
the wing tunnel at the Caiifornia Institute of Technology.
The use of
this airfoil on the Mustang would greatly add to the drag reducing concept that
was paramount in all design phases of the airplane. The few applications of
this foil, prior to this time, had been handbuilt structures which were
finished to exacting tolerances. An absolutely smooth surface was necessary due
to the fact that any surface break or rough protrusion would interrupt the
airflow and detract from the laminar flow theory. Because of the exactness
required, the foil had been shelved by other manufacturers due to the
clearances and tolerances which are used in mass production. The engineers at
NAA approached this problem with a plan to fill and paint the wing surface to
provide the necessary smoothness. The foil which was used for the Mustang had a
thickness ratio of 15.1 percent at the wing root at 39 percent of the chord.
The tip ratio was 11.4 percent at the 50 percent chord line. These figures
provided the maximum thickness area at 40 percent from the leading edge of the
wing and resulted in a small negative pressure gradient over the leading 50-60
percent of the wing surface.
The B-24
bomber's "Davis" airfoil was also a laminar flow airfoil, which
predates the Mustang's. However, the designers of the B-24 only knew that their
airfoil had very low drag in the wind tunnel. They did not know that it was a
laminar flow airfoil.
There were
several aircraft modified by NACA, in the late 1930s, to have laminar flow test
sections on their wings. Hence, such aircraft as a modified B-18 were some of
the first aircraft to fly with laminar flow airfoils.
The boundary
layer concept is credited to the great German aerodynamicist, Ludwig Prandtl.
Prandtl hyposthesized and proved the existence of the boundary layer long
before the Mustang was a gleam in anyone's eye.
Example: First, lets get more
specific about what laminar flow is. The flow next to any surface forms a
"boundary layer", as the flow has zero velocity right at the surface
and some distance out from the surface it flows at the same velocity as the
local "outside" flow. If this boundary layer flows in parllel layers,
with no energy transfer between layers, it is laminar. If there is energy
transfer, it is turbulent.
All boundary
layers start off as laminar. Many influences can act to destabilize a laminar
boundary layer, causing it to transition to turbulent. Adverse pressure
gradients, surface roughness, heat and acoustic energy all examples of
destabilizing influences. Once the boundary layer transitions, the skin
friction goes up. This is the primary result of a turbulent boundary layer. The
old "lift loss" myth is just that - a myth.
A favorable
pressure gradient is required to maintain laminar flow. Laminar flow airfoils
are designed to have long favorable pressure gradients. All airfoils must have
adverse pressure gradients on their aft end. The usual definition of a laminar
flow airfoil is that the favorable pressure gradient ends somewhere between 30 and
75% of chord.
Now Consider
the finish on your car in non-rainy conditions. Dust and leaves have settled on
the hood's paint. We go for a drive. At once the leaves blow off. But the dust
remains. We speed up. Even if we go very fast, the dust remains because of the
thin layer of air that moves with the car. If you drive with dew on your car,
the dew will not so quickly be blown dry where the air flow has this thin
laminar layer. Downstream, where the laminar flow has become turbulent, the air
flow quickly dries the dew.
In the fifties
this was dramatically shown in a photograph of the top of a sailplane wing
(inflight) that had dew on it. A few tiny seeds had landed on forward area the
wing while on the ground. In flight these seeds, tiny though they were, reached
through the laminar layer and caused micro-turbulence causing the dew to be
blown dried in an expanding vee shaped area down stream of each tiny seed.
Additional
information
Profile drag
This comprises
two components: surface friction drag and normal pressure drag (form drag).
Surface
friction drag
This arises
from the tangential stresses due to the viscosity or "stickiness" of
the air. When air flows over any part of an aircraft there exists, immediately
adjacent to the surface, a thin layer of air called the boundary layer, within
which the air slows from its high velocity at the edge of the layer to a
standstill at the surface itself. Surface friction drag depends upon the rate
of change of velocity through the boundary layer, i.e. the velocity gradient.
There are two types of boundary layer, laminar and turbulent, the essential
features of which are shown in Fig 8. Although all combat aircraft surfaces
develop a laminar boundary layer to start with, this rapidly becomes turbulent
within a few per cent of the length of the surface. This leaves most of the
aircraft immersed in a turbulent boundary layer, the thickness of which
increases with length along the surface. The velocity and hence pressure
variations along the length of any surface can have adverse effects on the
behavior of the boundary layer, as will be discussed later.
Surface
friction drag can amount to more than 30% of the total drag under cruise
conditions.
Normal
pressure drag (form drag)
This also
depends upon the viscosity of the air and is related to flow separation. It is
best explained by considering a typical pressure distribution over a wing
section, as shown in Fig 4, first at low AOA and then at high AOA.
At low AOA the
high pressures near the leading edge produce a component of force in the
rearward (i.e. drag) direction, while the low pressures ahead of the maximum
thickness point tend to suck the wing section forward, giving a thrust effect.
The low pressures aft of the maximum thickness point tend to suck the wing
rearwards, since they act on rearward-facing surfaces. Without the influence of
the boundary layer, the normal pressure forces due to the above drag and thrust
components would exactly cancel.
There is a
favorable pressure gradient up to the minimum pressure point, with the pressure
falling in the direction of flow. This helps to stabilize the boundary layer.
Downstream of the minimum pressure point, however, the thickening boundary
layer has to flow against an adverse pressure gradient. Viscous effects reduce
momentum within the boundary layer, and the thickness of the layer further
increases so that the external flow "sees" a body which does not
appear to close to a point at the trailing edge. A narrow wake is formed as the
boundary layer streams off the section. This prevents the pressures on the
aft-facing surface of the wing section from recovering to the high value
obtaining near the stagnation point on the leading edge, as they would have
done if a boundary layer had not formed. There is thus a lower than expected
pressure acting on the aftfacing surface, giving rise to normal pressure drag.
In the low-AOA case this component is small, most of the profile drag being
made up of surface friction drag.
As the AOA of
the wing section is increased, the point of minimum pressure moves towards the
leading edge, with increasingly high suction being achieved. This means that
the pressure then has to rise by a greater extent downstream of the minimum
pressure point and that the length of wing surface exposed to the rising
pressure is increased. The resulting adverse pressure gradient becomes more
severe as AOA is increased. This has serious implications for the boundary
layer, which is always likely to separate from the wing surface under such
conditions.
The Swept Wing
The whole idea of sweeping
an aircraft's wing is to delay the drag rise caused by the formation of shock
waves. The swept-wing concept had been appreciated by German aerodynamicists
since the mid-1930s, and by 1942 a considerable amount of research had gone
into it. However, in the United States and Great Britain, the concept of the
swept wing remained virtually unknown until the end of the war. Due to the
early research in this area, this allowed Germany to successfully introduce the
swept wing in the jet fighter Messerschmitt ME-262 as early as 1941.
Early British and American
jet aircraft were therefore of conventional straight-wing design, with a
high-speed performance that was consequently limited. Such aircraft included
the UKGloster Meteor F.4 , the U.S. Lockheed F-80 Sooting Star
and the experimental U.S. jet, the Bell XP-59A Airacomet.
After the war German
advanced aeronautical research data became available to the United States Army
Air Force (USAAF) as well as Great Britain. This technology was then
incorporated into their aircraft designs. Some early jets that took advantage
of this technology were the North American F-86 Sabre, the Hawker
Hunter F.4 and the Supermarine Swift FR.5.
Not to be outdone, the
Soviet Union introduced the swept wing in the Mikoyan Mig-15 in 1947.
This aircraft was the great rival of the North American F-86 Sabre
during the Korean War.
Jet Engine Theory
Centuries
ago in 100 A.D., Hero, a Greek philosopher and mathematician, demonstrated jet
power in a machine called an "aeolipile." A heated, water filled
steel ball with nozzles spun as steam escaped.
Over
the course of the past half a century, jet-powered flight has vastly changed
the way we all live. However, the basic principle of jet propulsion is neither
new nor complicated.
Centuries
ago in 100 A.D., Hero, a Greek philosopher and mathematician, demonstrated jet
power in a machine called an "aeolipile." A heated, water filled
steel ball with nozzles spun as steam escaped. Why? The principle behind this
phenomenon was not fully understood until 1690 A.D. when Sir Isaac Newton in
England formulated the principle of Hero's jet propulsion "aeolipile"
in scientific terms. His Third Law of Motion stated: "Every action
produces a reaction... equal in force and opposite in direction."
The
jet engine of today operates according to this same basic principle. Jet
engines contain three common components: the compressor, the combustor,
and the turbine. To this basic engine, other components may be added,
including:
·
A nozzle
to recover and direct the gas energy and possibly divert the thrust for
vertical takeoff and landing as well as changing direction of aircraft flight.
·
An afterburneror
augmentor, a long "tailpipe" behind the turbine into which
additional fuel is sprayed and burned to provide additional thrust.
·
A thrust
reverser, which blocks the gas rushing toward the rear of the engine, thus
forcing the gases forward to provide additional braking of aircraft.
·
A fan
in front of the compressor to increase thrust and reduce fuel consumption.
·
An
additional turbine that can be utilized to drive a propeller or helicopter
rotor.
The Turbojet Engine
A turbojet
engine.
The
turbojet is the basic engine of the jet age. Air is drawn into the engine
through the front intake. The compressor squeezes the air to many times normal
atmospheric pressure and forces it into the combustor. Here, fuel is sprayed
into the compressed air, is ignited and burned continuously like a blowtorch.
The burning gases expand rapidly rearward and pass through the turbine. The
turbine extracts energy from the expanding gases to drive the compressor, which
intakes more air. After leaving the turbine, the hot gases exit at the rear of
the engine, giving the aircraft its forward push... action, reaction !
For
additional thrust or power, an afterburner or augmentor can be added.
Additional fuel is introduced into the hot exhaust and burned with a resultant
increase of up to 50 percent in engine thrust by way of even higher velocity
and more push.
The
Turboprop/Turboshaft Engine
A
turboprop, or turboshaft engine.
A
turboprop engine uses thrust to turn a propeller. As in a turbojet, hot gases
flowing through the engine rotate a turbine wheel that drives the compressor.
The gases then pass through another turbine, called a power turbine. This power
turbine is coupled to the shaft, which drives the propeller through gear
connections.
A
turboshaft is similar to a turboprop engine, differing primarily in the
function of the turbine shaft. Instead of driving a propeller, the turbine
shaft is connected to a transmission system that drives helicopter rotor
blades; electrical generators, compressors and pumps; and marine propulsion
drives for naval vessels, cargo ships, high speed passenger ships, hydrofoils
and other vessels.
The Turbofan Engine
A
high bypass turbofan engine.
A
turbofan engine is basically a turbojet to which a fan has been added. Large
fans can be placed at either the front or rear of the engine to create high
bypass ratios for subsonic flight. In the case of a front fan, the fan is
driven by a second turbine, located behind the primary turbine that drives the
main compressor. The fan causes more air to flow around (bypass) the engine. This produces greater thrust and
reduces specific fuel consumption.
A
low bypass turbofan engine.
For
supersonic flight, a low bypass fan is utilized, and an augmentor is added for
additional thrust.
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