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Copyright © 1996-2005 jsd
3 Airfoils and Airflow
-
-
-
- --- Have you heard how to make a small fortune in the
aviation business?
- --- Start with a large one.
3.1 Flow Patterns Near a Wing
In this chapter I will explain a few things about how air behaves as
it flows past a wing. There will be lots of illustrations, such as
figure 3.1, produced by a wind-tunnel
simulation1 program that I wrote
for my computer. The wing is stationary in the middle of the wind
tunnel; air flows past it from left to right. A little ways upstream
of the wing (near the left edge of the figure) I have arranged a
number of smoke injectors. Seven of
them are on all the time, injecting thin streams of purple smoke. The
smoke is carried past the wing by the airflow, making visible
stream lines.
In addition, on a five-times closer vertical spacing, I inject
pulsed streamers. The smoke is turned on for 10
milliseconds out of every 20. In the figure, the blue smoke was
injected starting 70 milliseconds ago, the green smoke was injected
starting 50 milliseconds ago, the orange smoke was injected starting
30 milliseconds ago, and the red smoke was injected starting 10
milliseconds ago. The injection of the red smoke was ending just as
the snapshot was taken.
The set of all points that passed the injector array
at a given time defines a timeline. The right-hand edge
of the orange smoke is the “30 millisecond” timeline.
Figure 3.2 points out some important properties of
the airflow pattern. For one thing, we notice that the air just ahead
of the wing is moving not just left to right but also upward; this is
called upwash. Similarly, the air just aft of the wing is
moving not just left to right but also downward; this is called
downwash. Downwash behind the wing is relatively easy to
understand; the whole purpose of the wing is to impart some downward
motion to the air.
The upwash in front of the wing is a bit more interesting. As
discussed in section 3.6, air is a fluid, which means it can
exert pressure on itself as well as other things. The air pressure
strongly affects the air, even the air well in front of the wing.
Along the leading edge of the wing there is something called a
stagnation line, which is the dividing line between air that
flows over the top of the wing and air that flows under the bottom of
the wing. On an airplane, the stagnation line runs the length of the
wingspan, but since figure 3.2 shows only a cross
section of the wing, all we see of the stagnation line is a single
point.
Another stagnation line runs spanwise along the trailing
edge. It marks the place where air that passed above the wing
rejoins air that passed below the wing.
We see that at moderate or high angles of attack, the forward
stagnation line is found well below and aft of the leading
edge of the wing. The air that meets the wing just above the
stagnation line will backtrack toward the nose of the airplane, flow
up over the leading edge, and then flow aft along the top of the wing.
Figure 3.3 introduces some additional useful concepts.
Since the air near the wing is flowing at all sorts of different
speeds and directions, the question arises of what is the “true”
airspeed in the wind tunnel. The logical thing to do is to measure
the velocity of the free stream; that is,
at a point well upstream, before it has been disturbed by the wing.
The pulsed streamers give us a lot of information. Regions where the
pulsed streamers have been stretched out are high velocity regions.
This is pretty easy to see; each pulsed streamer lasts exactly 10
milliseconds, so if it covers a long distance in that time it must be
moving quickly. The maximum velocity produced by this wing at this
angle of attack is about twice the free-stream velocity.
Airfoils can be very effective at speeding up the air.
Conversely, regions where the pulsed streamers cover
a small distance in those 10 milliseconds must be low-velocity
regions. The minimum velocity is zero. That occurs near the
front and rear stagnation lines.
The relative wind vanishes on the stagnation lines.
A small bug walking on the wing of an airplane in flight could
walk along the stagnation line without feeling any wind.2
Stream lines have a remarkable property: the air
can never cross a stream line. That is because of the way the stream
lines were defined: by the smoke. If any air tried to flow past a
point where the smoke was, it would carry the smoke with it.
Therefore a particular parcel of air bounded by a pair of stream lines
(above and below) and a pair of timelines (front and rear) never loses
its identity. It can change shape, but it cannot mix with another
such parcel.3
Another thing we should
notice is that in low velocity regions, the stream lines are
farther apart from each other. This is no accident. At
reasonable airspeeds, the wing doesn’t push or pull on the air hard
enough to change its density significantly (see
section 3.4.3 for more on this). Therefore the air
parcels mentioned in the previous paragraph do not change in area when
they change their shape. In one region, we have a long, skinny parcel
of air flowing past a particular point at a high velocity. (If the
same amount of fluid flows through a smaller region, it must be
flowing faster.) In another region, we have a short fat parcel
flowing by at a low velocity.
The most remarkable thing about this figure is that the blue smoke
that passed slightly above the wing got to the trailing edge 10 or 15
milliseconds earlier than the corresponding smoke that passed
slightly below the wing.
This is not a mistake. Indeed, we shall see in section 3.10.3
that if this were not true, it would be impossible for the wing to
produce lift.
This may come as a shock to many readers, because all sorts of
standard references claim that the air is somehow required to pass
above and below the wing in the same amount of time. I have seen this
erroneous statement in elementary-school textbooks, advanced physics
textbooks, encyclopedias, and well-regarded pilot training handbooks.
Bear with me for a moment, and I’ll convince you that figure 3.3 tells the true story.
First, I must convince you that there is no law of
physics that prevents one bit of fluid from being delayed relative
to another.
Consider the scenario depicted in figure 3.4. A river of water
is flowing left to right. Using a piece of garden hose, I siphon some
water out of the river, let it waste some time going through several
feet of coiled-up hose, and then return it to the river. The water
that went through the hose will be delayed. The delayed parcel of
water will never catch up with its former neighbors; it will not even
try to catch up.
Note that delaying the water did not require
compressing the water, nor did it require
friction.
Let’s now discuss the behavior of air near a wing. We will see that
there are two parts to the story: The obstacle effect, and the
circulation effect.
The first part of the story is that the wing is an obstacle to the
air. Air that passes near such an obstacle will be delayed. In fact,
air that comes arbitrarily close to a stagnation line will be
delayed an arbitrarily
long time. The air molecules just hang around in the vicinity of the
stagnation line, like the proverbial donkey midway between two bales
of hay, unable to decide which alternative to choose.
Air near the wing is delayed relative to an undisturbed parcel of air.
The obstacle effect is about the same for a parcel passing above the
wing as it is for the parcel passing a corresponding distance below
the wing. This effect falls off very quickly as a function of
distance from the wing. You can see that the air that hits the
stagnation line dead-on (the middle blue streamer) never makes it to
the trailing edge, as you can see in all three panels of figure 3.5.
When the wing is producing zero lift, this obstacle effect is pretty
much the whole story, as shown in the top panel of figure 3.5.
Now we turn to the second part of the story, the circulation effect.
In figure 3.5 the panels are labelled as to angle of attack.
Lift is proportional to angle of attack whenever the angle is not too
large. In particular, the zero-lift case is what we are calling zero
angle of attack, even for cambered wings, as discussed in
section 2.2.
For the rest of this section, we assume the wing is producing a
positive amount of lift. This makes the airflow patterns much more
interesting, as you can see from the second and third panels of
figure 3.5. An air parcel that passes above the wing arrives at the
trailing edge early. It arrives early compared to the parcel a
corresponding distance below the wing, with no exceptions. This is
because of something called circulation, as will be discussed in
section 3.10.
We can also see that most of the air passing above the wing
arrives early in absolute terms, early compared to an undisturbed
parcel of air. The exception occurs very close to the wing, where the
obstacle effect (as previously discussed) overwhelms the circulation
effect.
Unlike the obstacle effect, the circulation effect drops off quite
slowly. It extends for quite a distance above and below the wing -- a
distance comparable to the wingspan.
A wing is amazingly effective at producing circulation, which speeds
up the air above it. Even though
the air that passes above the wing has a longer path, it gets to the
back earlier than the corresponding air that passes below the
wing.
Note the contrast:
|
The change in speed is temporary. As the
air reaches the trailing edge and thereafter, it quickly returns to
its original, free-stream velocity (plus a slight downward component).
This can been seen in the figures, such as figure 3.3
--- the spacing between successive smoke pulses returns to its
original value.
|
|
The change in relative position is permanent. If we
follow the air far downstream of the wing, we find that the air that
passed below the wing will never catch up with the corresponding air
that passed above the wing. It will not even try to catch up.
|
3.2 Pressure Patterns Near a Wing
Figure 3.6 is a contour plot that shows what the pressure
is doing in the vicinity of the wing. All pressures will be measured
relative to the ambient atmospheric pressure in the free stream. The
blue-shaded regions indicate suction, i.e. negative pressure relative
to ambient, while the red-shaded regions indicate positive pressure
relative to ambient. The dividing line between pressure and suction
is also indicated in the figure.
The pressure and suction created by the wing are conveniently measured
in multiples of the dynamic pressure.4 It is usually
represented by the symbol Q. For a typical general-aviation flight
situation, Q is about half a pound per square inch. The maximum
positive pressure on the airfoil is exactly equal to Q; this occurs
right at the stagnation lines.5 The maximum
suction depends on the angle of attack, and on the detailed shape of
the airfoil; for the situation in figure 3.6 the max suction
is just over 0.8 Q. Each contour in the figure represents exactly
0.2 Q (roughly 0.1 psi).
There is a lot we can learn from studying this figure. For one thing,
we see that the front quarter or so of the wing does half of the
lifting. Another thing to notice is that suction acting on the top of
the wing is vastly more important than pressure acting on the bottom
of the wing. In figure 3.6, the wing is flying at an angle
of attack of 3 degrees, a reasonable “cruise” value.
At this angle of attack, there is almost no high pressure on the
bottom of the wing; indeed there is mostly suction
there.6 The only reason the wing can support the weight
of the airplane is that there is more suction on the top of the
wing. (There is a tiny amount of positive pressure on the rear
portion of the bottom surface, but the fact remains that suction above
the wing does more than 100% of the job of lifting the
airplane.)7
This pressure pattern would be really hard to explain in terms of
bullets bouncing off the wing. Remember, the air is a fluid, as
discussed in section 3.6. It has a well-defined pressure
everywhere in space. When this pressure field meets the wing, it
exerts a force: pressure times area equals force.
At higher angles of attack, above-atmospheric pressure does develop
below the wing, but it is always less pronounced than the
below-atmospheric pressure above the wing.
3.3 Stream Line Curvature
Figure 3.7 shows what happens near the wing when we change the
angle of attack. You can see that as the velocity changes, the
pressure changes also.
It turns out that given the velocity field, it is rather
straightforward to calculate the pressure field. Indeed there are two
ways to do this; we discuss one of them here, and the other in
section 3.4.
We know that air has mass. Moving air has momentum. If the air
parcel follows a curved path, there must be a net force on it, as
required by Newton’s laws.8
Pressure alone does not make a net force; you need a pressure
difference so that one side of the air parcel is being pressed
harder than the other. Therefore the rule is this: If at any place
the stream lines are curved, the pressure at nearby places is
different.
You can see in the figures that tightly-curved streamlines correspond
to big pressure gradients and vice versa.
If you want to know the pressure everywhere, you can start somewhere
and just add up all the changes as you move from place to place to
place. This is mathematically tedious, but it works. It works even
in situations where Bernoulli’s principle isn’t immediately applicable.
3.4 Bernoulli’s Principle
We now discuss a second way in which pressure is related to velocity,
namely Bernoulli’s principle. In situations where this principle can
be applied (which includes most situations), this is by far the
slickest way to do it.
Bernoulli’s principle can be derived from the law of conservation of
energy. It involves the kinetic energy of moving air and the potential energy stored in the “springiness” of the air.
Just as energy can be stored in a wound-up spring, energy is stored in
pressurized air.
Pressure, denoted P, is (by definition) a force per unit area,
which is the same thing as an energy per unit volume:9
P = Potential Energy per volume
(
3.1)
Meanwhile, moving air contains kinetic energy
just like any other moving object:
½ρ
v2 = Kinetic Energy per volume
(
3.2)
where v is the local velocity, and ρ (the Greek letter
“rho”) is the density, i.e. the mass per unit volume.
Combining these, we conclude:
P + ½ρ
v2
= Mechanical Energy per volume
(
3.3)
Next, we make the approximation that we can ignore non-mechanical
forms of energy (such as chemical reactions or heat produced by
friction), and that we are not adding energy to the air using pumps,
pistons, or whatever. Then, using the law that total energy cannot
change (see chapter 1), we conclude that a given air
parcel’s mechanical energy remains constant as it flows past the wing.
Now, if the right-hand side of equation 3.3 is a constant, it
tells us that whenever a given parcel of air increases its velocity,
it must decrease its pressure, and vice versa. This relationship is
called Bernoulli’s principle.
Higher velocity means lower pressure, and vice versa
(assuming constant mechanical energy).
|
|
Oftentimes10 it turns out that all the air
parcels start out with the same mechanical energy. In such a case we
can even make a Bernoulli-like statement comparing different
parcels of air: Any fast-moving air must have lower pressure than any
slow-moving air with the same mechanical energy.
Bernoulli’s principle cannot be trusted if processes
other than kinetic energy and pressure energy are important.
In particular, in the “boundary layer” very near the
surface of a wing, energy is constantly being dissipated (converted
to heat) by friction. Fortunately, the boundary layer is usually
very thin (except near the stall), and if we ignore it entirely
Bernoulli’s principle gives essentially the right answer.
It makes sense to measure the local velocity (lower-case
v) at each point as a multiple of the free-stream velocity
(capital V) since they vary in proportion to each other.
Similarly it makes sense to measure relative pressures in terms
of the dynamic pressure:
which is always small compared to atmospheric pressure (assuming V
is small compared to the speed of sound). The pressure versus
velocity relationship is shown graphically in figure 3.8.
The highest possible pressure (corresponding to completely stopped
air) is one Q above atmospheric, while fast-moving air can have
pressure several Q below atmospheric.
It doesn’t matter whether we measure P as
an absolute pressure or as a relative pressure (relative to atmospheric).
If you change from absolute to relative pressure it just shifts
both sides of Bernoulli’s equation by a constant, and the new
value (just as before) remains constant as the air parcel flows
past the wing. Similarly, if we use relative pressure in figure 3.8, we can drop the word “Atm” from the
pressure axis and just speak of “positive one Q”
and “negative two Q” --- keeping in mind that all
the pressures are only slightly above or below one atmosphere.
Bernoulli’s principle allows us to understand why there is a positive
pressure bubble right at the trailing edge of the wing (which is the
last place you would expect if you thought of the air as a bunch of
bullets). The air at the stagnation line is the slowest-moving air in
the whole system; it is not moving at all. It has the highest
possible pressure, namely 1 Q.
As we saw in the bottom panel of figure 3.7, at high angles of
attack a wing is extremely effective at speeding up the air above the
wing and retarding the air below the wing. The maximum local velocity
above the wing can be more than twice the free-stream velocity.
This creates a negative pressure (suction) of more than 3 Q.
3.4.2 Altimeters; Static versus Stagnation Pressure
Consider the following line of reasoning:
-
The
airplane’s altimeter operates by measuring the pressure at the
static port. See section 20.2.2 for more on
this.
- The static port is oriented sideways to the airflow, at a point
where the air flows past with a local velocity just equal to the
free-stream velocity.
- In accordance with Bernoulli’s principle, this velocity must be
associated with a “lower” pressure there.
- You might think this lower pressure would cause huge errors in
the altimeter, depending on airspeed. In fact, though, there are no
such errors. The question is, why not?
The answer has to do with the notion of “lower” pressure. You have
to ask, lower than what? Indeed the pressure there is 1 Q lower than the mechanical energy (per
unit volume) of the air. However, in your reference
frame, the mechanical energy of the air is
1 Atm + 1
Q. When we subtract 1
Q from that, we see that the pressure in the static port is
just equal to atmospheric. Therefore the altimeter gets the right
answer, independent of airspeed.
Another way of saying it is that the air near the static port has
1 Atm of potential energy (pressure) and
1 Q
of kinetic energy. The altimeter is sensitive only to pressure, so it
reads 1 Atm --- as it should.
In contrast, the air in the Pitot tube has the same mechanical energy,
1 Atm + 1 Q,
but it is all in the form of potential energy since (in your reference
frame) it has no kinetic energy.
The mechanical energy per unit volume is officially called the
stagnation pressure, since it is the pressure that you observe
in the Pitot tube or any other place where the air is stagnant,
i.e. where the local velocity v is zero (relative to the airplane).
In ordinary language “static” and “stagnant” mean almost the same
thing, but in aerodynamics they designate two very different concepts.
The static pressure is the pressure you would measure in the
reference frame of the air, for instance if you were in a balloon
comoving with the free stream. As you increase your airspeed, the
stagnation pressure goes up, but the static pressure does not.
Also: we can contrast this with what happens in a carburetor.
There is no change of reference frames, so the mechanical energy (per
unit volume) remains
1 Atm.
The high-speed air in the throat of the Venturi has a pressure
below the ambient atmospheric pressure.
3.4.3 Compressibility
First, a bit of terminology:
- Pressure denotes a force per unit area.
- Compressibility denotes a change in density in response
to pressure.
Non-experts may not make much distinction between a “pressurized”
fluid and a “compressed” fluid, but in the engineering literature
there is a world of difference between the two concepts.
Every substance on earth is compressible --- be it air, water, cast
iron, or anything else. It must increase its density when you apply
pressure; otherwise there would be no way to balance the energy
equations.
However, changes in density are not very important to understanding
how wings work, as long as the airspeed is not near or above the speed
of sound. Typical general aviation airspeeds correspond to Mach 0.2
or 0.3 or thereabouts (even when we account for the fact that the wing
speeds up the air locally), and at those speeds the density never
changes more than a few percent.
For an ideal gas such as air, density is proportional to pressure, so
you may be wondering why pressure-changes are important but
density-changes are not. Here’s why: -
Lift depends on a pressure difference between the top and
bottom of the wing. Similarly pressure drag depends on pressure
differences. Therefore the relevant differential pressures are
zero plus important terms proportional to ½ρV2.
- Meanwhile, the density is some big number plus or minus
unimportant terms proportional to ½ρV2.
To say it again: Flight depends directly on total density but
not directly on total atmospheric pressure, just differences in
pressure.
Many books say the air is “incompressible” in the subsonic
regime. That’s bizarrely misleading. In fact, when those books use
the words “incompressible flow” it generally means that the density
undergoes only small-percentage changes. This has got nothing to do
with whether the fluid has a high or low compressibility. The real
explanation is that the density-changes are small because the
pressure-changes are small compared to the total atmospheric pressure.
Similarly, many books say that equation 3.3 only applies to an
“incompressible” fluid. Again, that’s
bizarrely misleading. Here’s the real story:
-
Compressibility specifies to first order how density depends on
pressure. Equation 3.1 specifies to first order how the energy
depends on pressure. It already accounts for the effects of
compressibility and all other first-order quantities. Therefore
equation 3.3 is valid whenever the pressure-changes are a small
percentage of the total pressure, regardless of compressibility.
- At high airspeeds, the pressure changes are bigger, and you need
a more sophisticated form of Bernoulli’s equation. As shown below, it
is straightforward to include second-order terms --- which, by the
way, don’t depend on compressibility, either. Indeed you can use the
full equation of state, to derive Bernoulli’s equation in a form
that is valid even for large-percentage changes in pressure. See
reference 2, page 29, equation 11.
Here is Bernoulli’s equation including the second-order term. I have
rewritten it in terms of energy per mass (rather than energy per
volume), to make it clear that compression doesn’t matter, since a
parcel’s mass doesn’t change even if its volume and energy
are changing:
|
|
|
[1 - |
|
|
|
]
+ ½ v2
= constant
(3.5) |
where ρ0 is the density of air at atmospheric pressure,
and where γ (gamma) is a constant that appears in the equation
of state for the fluid. Its value ranges from 1.666 for helium, to
1.4 for air, to 1.0 for cool liquid water. It’s ironic that the
correction is actually smaller for air (which has a high
compressibility) than it is for water (which has a much lower
compressibility).
In equation 3.5, when the pressure P is near
atmospheric, the term in square brackets approaches unity, and the
expression becomes equivalent to the elementary version,
equation 3.3, as it should. This in turn tells us that the
constant on the RHS of equation 3.5 is equal to the
mechanical energy that the parcel has whenever it is in free-stream
conditions.
Don’t let anybody tell you that Bernoulli’s principle can’t cope with
compressibility. Even the elementary version (equation 3.3)
accounts for compressibility to first order.
3.5 Stall Warning Devices
We are now in a position to understand how stall warning devices
work. There are two types of stall-warning devices commonly used on
light aircraft. The first type (used on most Pipers, Mooneys, and
Beechcraft) uses a small vane mounted slightly below and aft of the
leading edge of the wing as shown in the left panel of
figure 3.9. The warning is actuated when the vane is blown
up
and forward. At low angles of attack (e.g. cruise) the stagnation
line is forward of the vane, so the vane gets blown backward and
everybody is happy. As the angle of attack increases, the stagnation
line moves farther and farther aft underneath
the wing. When it has moved farther aft than the vane, the air will
blow the vane forward and upward and the stall warning will be
activated.
The second type of stall-warning device (used on the Cessna 152, 172,
and some others, not including the 182) operates on a different
principle. It is sensitive to suction at the surface rather than flow
along the surface. It is positioned just below the leading edge of
the wing, as indicated in the right panel of figure 3.9.
At low angles of attack, the leading edge is a low-velocity,
high-pressure region; at high angles of attack it becomes a
high-velocity, low-pressure region. When the low-pressure region
extends far enough down around the leading edge, it will suck air out
of the opening. The air flows through a harmonica reed, producing an
audible warning.
Note that neither device actually detects the stall. Each one really
just measures angle of attack. It is designed to give you a warning a
few degrees before the wing reaches the angle of attack where
the stall is expected. Of course if there is something wrong, such as
frost on the wings (see section 3.13),
the stall will occur at a lower-than-expected angle of attack, and you
will get no warning from the so-called stall warning device.
3.6 Air Is A Fluid, Not A Bunch of Bullets
We all know that at the submicroscopic level, air consists of
particles, namely molecules
of nitrogen, oxygen, water, and various other substances. Starting
from the properties of these molecules and their interactions, it is
possible to calculate macroscopic properties such as pressure,
velocity, viscosity, speed of sound, et cetera.
However, for ordinary purposes such as understanding how wings work,
you can pretty much forget about the individual particles, since the
relevant information is well summarized by the macroscopic properties
of the fluid. This is called the hydrodynamic
approximation.
In fact, when people try to think about the individual
particles, it is a common mistake to overestimate the size of
the particles and to underestimate the importance of the interactions
between particles.
If you erroneously imagine that air particles are large and
non-interacting, perhaps like the bullets shown
in figure 3.10, you will never understand how wings work.
Consider the following comparisons. There is only one important thing
bullets and air molecules have in common:
|
Bullets hit the bottom of the wing, transferring upward momentum
to it.
|
|
Similarly, air molecules hit the bottom of the wing, transferring
upward momentum to it.
|
Otherwise, all the important parts of the story are different:
|
No bullets hit the top of the wing.
|
|
Air pressure on top of the wing is only a few percent lower than the
pressure on the bottom.
|
|
The shape of the top of the wing doesn’t matter to the bullets.
|
|
The shape of the top of the wing is crucial. A spoiler at
location “X” in figure 3.10 could easily double the drag of
the entire airplane.
|
|
The bullets don’t hit each other, and
even if they did, it wouldn’t affect lift production.
|
|
Each air molecule collides with one or another of its neighbors
10,000,000,000 times per second. This is crucial.
|
|
Each bullet weighs a few grams.
|
|
Each nitrogen molecule weighs
0.00000000000000000000005 grams.
|
|
Bullets that pass above or below the wing are undeflected.
|
|
The wing creates a pressure field that strongly deflects
even far-away bits of fluid, out to a distance of a wingspan or so in
every direction.
|
|
Bullets could not possibly knock a stall-warning vane forward.
|
|
Fluid flow nicely explains how such a vane gets blown
forward and upward. See section 3.5.
|
The list goes on and on, but you get the idea. Interactions between
air molecules are a big part of the story. It is a much better
approximation to think of the air as a continuous fluid
than as a bunch of bullet-like particles.
3.7 Other Fallacies
You may have heard stories that try to use the Coanda effect or
the teaspoon effect to explain how wings produce lift. These
stories are completely fallacious, as discussed in
section 18.4.4 and section 18.4.3.
There are dozens of other fallacies besides. It is beyond the scope
of this book to discuss them, or even to catalog them all.
3.8 Inverted Flight, Cambered vs. Symmetric Airfoils
You’ve probably been told that an airfoil produces lift because it is
curved on top and flat on the bottom. But you shouldn’t
believe it, not even for an instant.
Presumably you are aware that airshow pilots routinely fly for
extended periods of time upside down. Doesn’t
that make you suspicious that there might be something wrong with the
story about curved on top and flat on the bottom?
Here is a list of things you need in an airplane
intended for upside-down flight:
-
You need super-duper
seatbelts to keep the pilot from flopping around.
- You need to make sure the airframe is strong
enough to withstand extra stress, including stress in new directions.
- You need to make sure that the fuel, engine oil,
and battery acid stay where they are supposed to be.
You will notice that changing the cross-sectional shape of the wing is
not on this list. Any ordinary wing flies just fine inverted. Even a
wing that is flat on one side and curved on the other flies just fine
inverted, as shown in figure 3.11. It may look a bit peculiar, but
it works.
The misconception that wings must be curved on top and flat on the
bottom is commonly associated with the previously-discussed
misconception that the air is required to pass above and below the
wing in equal amounts of time. In fact, an upside-down wing produces
lift by exactly the same principle as a rightside-up wing.
To help us discuss airfoil shapes, figure 3.12
illustrates some useful terminology.
-
The chord line is the straight line drawn from the
leading edge to the trailing edge.
- The term camber in
general means “bend”. If you want to quantify the amount of
camber, draw a curved line from the leading edge to the trailing edge,
staying always halfway between the upper surface and the lower
surface; this is called the mean camber line. The maximum
difference between this and the chord line is the amount of camber.
It can be expressed as a distance or (more commonly) as a percentage
of the chord length.
A symmetric airfoil, where the top surface is a mirror image of
the bottom surface, has zero camber. The airflow and pressure
patterns for such an airfoil are shown in figure 3.13.
This figure could be considered the side view of
a symmetric wing, or the top view of a rudder. Rudders are airfoils,
too, and work by the same principles.
At small angles of attack, a symmetric airfoil works
better than a highly cambered airfoil. Conversely, at high angles
of attack, a cambered airfoil works better than the corresponding
symmetric airfoil. An example of this is shown in figure 3.14.
The airfoil designated “631-012” is symmetric, while
the airfoil designated “631-412” airfoil is cambered;
otherwise the two are pretty much the same.11 At any normal angle of attack (up to
about 12 degrees), the two airfoils produce virtually identical
amounts of lift. Beyond that point the cambered airfoil has a
big advantage because it does not stall until a much higher relative
angle of attack. As a consequence, its maximum coefficient of
lift is much greater.
At high angles of attack, the leading edge of a cambered
wing will slice into the wind at less of an angle compared to
the corresponding symmetric wing. This doesn’t prove anything,
but it provides an intuitive feeling for why the cambered wing
has more resistance to stalling.
On some airplanes, the airfoils have no camber at all, and on most of
the rest the camber is barely perceptible (maybe 1 or 2 percent). One
reason wings are not more cambered is that any increase would require
the bottom surface to be concave --- which would be a pain to
manufacture. A more profound reason is that large camber is only really
beneficial near the stall, and it suffices to create lots of camber by
extending the flaps when needed, i.e. for takeoff and landing.
Reverse camber is clearly a bad idea (since it causes
earlier stall) so aircraft that are expected to perform well upside
down (e.g. Pitts or Decathlon) have symmetric (zero-camber) airfoils.
We have seen that under ordinary conditions, the
amount of lift produced by a wing depends on the angle of attack,
but hardly depends at all on the amount of camber. This makes
sense. In fact, the airplane would be unflyable if the coefficient
of lift were determined solely by the shape of the wing. Since
the amount of camber doesn’t often change in flight, there would
be no way to change the coefficient of lift. The airplane could
only support its weight at one special airspeed, and would be
unstable and uncontrollable. In reality, the pilot (and the trim
system) continually regulate the amount of lift by regulating
the all-important angle of attack; see chapter 2 and
chapter 6.
3.9 Thin Wings
The wing used on the Wright brothers’ first airplane is shown in
figure 3.15.
It is thin, highly cambered, and quite concave on the bottom. There
is no significant difference between the top surface and the bottom
surface --- same length, same curvature. Still, the wing produces
lift, using the same lift-producing principle as any other airfoil.
This should further dispel the notion that wings produce lift because
of a difference in length between the upper and lower surfaces.
Similar remarks apply to the sail of a sailboat. It is a very thin
wing, oriented more-or-less vertically, producing sideways lift.
Even a thin flat object such as a barn door will produce lift,
if the wind strikes it at an appropriate angle of attack. The airflow
pattern (somewhat idealized) for a barn door (or the wing on a
dime-store balsa glider) is shown in figure 3.16. Once again,
the lift-producing mechanism is the same.
3.10 Circulation
3.10.1 Visualizing the circulation
You may be wondering whether the flow patterns shown in
figure 3.16 or the earlier figures are the only ones allowed by
the laws of hydrodynamics. The answer is: almost, but not quite.
Figure 3.17 shows the barn door operating with the same angle of
attack (and the same airspeed) as in figure 3.16, but the airflow
pattern is different.
The new airflow pattern (figure 3.17) is
highly symmetric. I have deleted the timing information, to make
it clear that the stream lines are unchanged if you flip the figure
right/left and top/bottom. The front stagnation line is a certain
distance behind the leading edge; the rear stagnation line is
the same distance ahead of the trailing edge. This airflow pattern
produces no lift. (There will be a lot of torque --- the so-called Rayleigh torque --- but no
lift.)
The key idea here is circulation
--- figure 3.16 has circulation while figure 3.17
does not. (Figure 3.19 is the same as figure 3.16
without the timing information.)
To understand circulation and its effects, first
imagine an airplane with barn-door wings, parked on the ramp on
a day with no wind. Then imagine stirring the air with a paddle,
setting up a circulatory flow pattern, flowing nose-to-tail over
the top of the wing and tail-to-nose under the bottom (clockwise
in this figure). This is the flow pattern for pure circulation,
as shown in figure 3.18. Then imagine that a headwind
springs up (left to right in the figure). At each point in space,
the velocity fields will add. The circulatory flow and the wind
will add above the wing, producing high velocity and low
pressure there. The circulatory flow will partially cancel
the wind below the wing, producing low velocity and high pressure
there.
If we take the noncirculatory left-to-right flow in figure 3.17 and add various amounts of circulation, we can generate
all the flow patterns consistent with the laws of hydrodynamics
--- including the actual natural airflow shown in figure 3.16
and figure 3.19.12
There is nothing special about barn doors; real airfoils
have analogous airflow patterns, as shown in figure 3.20,
figure 3.21, and figure 3.22.
Figure 3.20: Unnatural Airflow --- Angle of Attack
but No Circulation
If you suddenly accelerate a wing from a standing
start, the initial airflow pattern will be noncirculatory, as
shown in figure 3.20. Fortunately for us, the air
absolutely hates this airflow pattern, and by the time the wing
has traveled a short distance (a couple of chord-lengths or so)
it develops enough circulation to produce the normal airflow
pattern shown in figure 3.22.
3.10.2 How Much Circulation? The Kutta Condition
In real flight situations, precisely enough circulation will be
established so that the rear stagnation line is right at the trailing
edge, so no air needs to turn the corner there. The counterclockwise
flow at the trailing edge in figure 3.17 is cancelled by the
clockwise flow in figure 3.18. Meanwhile, at the leading edge,
both figure 3.17 and figure 3.18 contribute clockwise
flow, so the real flow pattern (figure 3.19) has lots and lots
of flow around the leading edge.
The general rule --- called the Kutta condition --- is that the
air hates to turn the corner at a sharp trailing edge. To a first
approxmation, the air hates to turn the corner at any sharp
edge, because the high velocity there creates a lot of friction.
For ordinary wings, that’s all we need to know, because the trailing
edge is the only sharp edge.
The funny thing is that if the trailing edge is sharp, an airfoil will
work even if the leading edge is sharp, too. This explains why
dime-store balsa-wood gliders work, even with sharp leading edges.
It is a bit of a mystery
why the air hates turning a corner at the trailing edge, and doesn’t
mind so much turning a sharp corner at the leading edge --- but
that’s the way it is.13 This is related to the well-known fact
that blowing is different from sucking. (Even though you can blow out
a candle from more than a foot away, you cannot suck out a candle from
more than an inch or two away.) In any case, the rule is:
|
The air wants to flow cleanly off the trailing edge.
|
|
As the angle of attack increases, the amount of circulation needed
to meet the Kutta condition increases.
Here is a nice, direct way of demonstrating the Kutta condition:
-
Choose an airplane where the stall warning indicator is on the flapped
section of the wing. This includes the Cessna C-152 and
C-172, but not the C-182. It includes most Mooneys and the Grumman
Tiger, but excludes Piper Cherokees and the Beech Bonanza.
- At a safe altitude, start with the airplane in the clean configuration
in level flight, a couple of knots above the speed where the stall
warning horn comes on.
- Maintaining constant pitch attitude and maintaining level flight,
extend the flaps. The stall warning horn will come on.
There is no need to stall the airplane; the warning horn itself makes
the point.
This demonstration makes it clear that the flap (which is at the
back of the wing) is having a big effect on the airflow around
the entire wing, including the stall-warning detector (which is
near the front).
Extending the flaps (while maintaining constant pitch and constant
direction of flight) increases the angle of attack. This increases
the circulation, which trips the stall-warning detector as described
in section 3.5.
3.10.3 How Much Lift? The Kutta-Zhukovsky Theorem
Here is a beautifully simple and powerful result: The lift is equal to
the airspeed, times the circulation, times the density of the air,
times the span of the wing. This is called the Kutta-Zhukovsky
theorem.14
Lift = airspeed × circulation
× density × span
(
3.6)
Since circulation is proportional to the coefficient of lift and
to the airspeed, this new notion is consistent with our previous
knowledge that the lift should be proportional to the coefficient
of lift times airspeed squared.
You can look at a velocity field and visualize the circulation. In
figure 3.23, the right-hand edge of the blue streamers shows
where the air is 70 milliseconds after passing the reference point.
For comparison, the vertical black line shows where the 70 millisecond
timeline would have been if the wing had been completely absent.
However, this comparison is not important; you should be comparing
each air parcel above the wing with the corresponding parcel below the
wing.
Figure 3.23: Circulation Advances Upper & Retards
Lower Streamers
Because of the circulatory contribution to the velocity, the streamers
above the wing are at a relatively advanced position, while the
streamers below the wing are at a relatively retarded position.
If you refer back to figure 3.7, you can see that circulation
is proportional to angle of attack. In particular, note that
when the airfoil is not producing lift there is no circulation
--- the upper streamers are not advanced relative to the lower streamers.
The same thing can be seen by comparing figure 3.20
to figure 3.22 --- when there is no circulation the upper
streamers are not advanced relative to the lower streamers.
3.10.4 Quantifying the Circulation
Circulation can be measured, according to the following procedure.
Set up an imaginary loop around the wing. Go around the loop
clockwise, dividing it into a large number of small segments. For
each segment, multiply the length of that segment times the speed of
the air along the direction of the loop at that point. (If the
airflow direction is opposite to the direction of the loop, the
product will be negative.) Add up all the products. The total
velocity-times-length will be the circulation. This is the
official definition.
Interestingly, the answer is essentially independent of the size and
shape of the loop.15 For instance, if you go farther
away, the velocity will be lower but the loop will be longer, so the
velocity-times-length will be unchanged.
3.11 Mechanically-Induced Circulation
There is a widely-held misconception that it is the
velocity relative to the skin of the wing that produces
lift. This causes no end of confusion.
Remember that the air has a well defined velocity and pressure
everywhere, not just at the surface of the wing. Using a windmill and
a pressure gauge, you can measure the velocity and pressure anywhere
in the air, near the wing or elsewhere. The circulatory flow set up
by the wing creates low pressure in a huge region extending far above
the wing. The velocity at each point determines the pressure at that
point.
The circulation near a wing is normally set up by
the interaction of the wind with the shape of the wing. But there
are other ways of setting up circulatory flow. In figure 3.24,
the wings are not airfoil-shaped but paddle-shaped. By rotating
the paddle-wings, we
can set up a circulatory airflow pattern by brute force.
Bernoulli’s principle applies point-by-point in the air near the wing,
creating low pressure that pulls up on the wings, even though the air
near the wing has no velocity relative to the wing -- it is “stuck”
between the vanes of the paddle. The Kutta-Zhukovsky theorem remains
the same as stated above: lift is equal to the airspeed, times the
circulation, times the density of the air, times the span of the wing.
This phenomenon --- creating the circulation needed for lift by
mechanically stirring the air --- is called the Magnus effect.
The airplane in figure 3.24 would have definite
controllability problems, since the notion of angle of attack
would not exist (see chapter 2 and chapter 6).
The concept, though, is not as ridiculous as might seem. The
famous aerodynamicist Flettner once built a ship that “sailed” all the way across the Atlantic
using huge rotating cylinders as “sails” to catch the wind.
Figure 3.25: Fluttering Card --- Lift Created by Circulation
Also, it is easier than you might think to demonstrate
this important concept. You don’t need four vanes on the rotating
paddle; a single flat surface will do. A business card works
fairly well. Drop the card from shoulder height, with its long
axis horizontal. As you release it, give it a little bit of backspin
around the long axis. It will fly surprisingly well; the lift-to-drag
ratio is not enormous, but it is not zero either. The motion
is depicted in figure 3.25.
You can improve the performance by giving the wing
a finer aspect ratio (more span and/or less chord). I once took
a manila folder and cut out several pieces an inch wide and 11
inches long; they work great.
As an experiment, try giving the wing the wrong direction
of circulation (i.e. topspin) as you release it. What do you
think will happen?
I strongly urge you to try this demonstration yourself.
It will improve your intuition about the relationship of circulation
and lift.
We can use these ideas to understand some (but not all) of the
aerodynamics of tennis balls and similar
objects. As portrayed in figure 3.26, if a ball is hit with a lot
of backspin, the surface of the spinning ball will create the
circulatory
flow pattern necessary to produce lift, and it will be a “floater”.
Conversely, the classic “smash” involves topspin, which produces
negative lift, causing the ball to “fly” into the ground faster than
it would under the influence of gravity alone. Similar words apply to
leftward and rightward curve balls.
To get even close to the right answer, we must ask where the relative
wind is fast or slow, relative to undisturbed parcels of air --- not
relative to the rotating surface of the ball. Remember that the fluid
has a velocity and a pressure everywhere, not just at the surface of
the ball. Air moving past a surface creates drag, not
lift. Bernoulli says that when an air parcel changes speed, it
exchanges its kinetic energy (airspeed) for potential energy
(pressure). For the floater, the circulatory flow created by the
backspin combines with the free-stream flow created by the ball’s
forward motion to create high-velocity, low-pressure air above the
ball --- that is, lift.
|
The air has velocity and pressure
everywhere ... not just at surfaces.
|
|
This simple picture of mechanically-induced circulation
applies best to balls that have evenly-distributed roughness.
Cricket balls are in a different category, since they have a
prominent equatorial seam. If you spin-stabilize the orientation
of the seam, and fly the seam at an “angle of attack”,
airflow over the seam causes extra turbulence which promotes attached
flow on one side of the ball. See section 18.3
for some discussion of attached versus separated flow. Such effects
can overwhelm the mechanically-induced circulation.
To really understand flying balls or cylinders, you
would need to account for the direct effect of spin on circulation,
the effect of spin on separation, the effect of seams on separation,
et cetera. That would go beyond the scope of this book. A wing
is actually easier to understand.
3.12 Lift Requires Circulation & Vortices
A vortex is a bunch of air circulating around itself. The axis
around which the air is rotating is called a vortex line. It is
mathematically impossible for a vortex line
to have loose ends. A smoke ring is an example of a vortex. It
closes on itself so it has no loose ends.
The circulation necessary to produce lift can attributed to a
bound vortex line. It binds to the wing and travels with the
airplane. The question arises, what happens to this vortex line at
the wingtips?
The answer is that the vortex spills off each wingtip. Each wing
forms a trailing vortex (also called
wake vortex) that extends for miles behind the airplane. These
trailing vortices constitute the continuation of the bound vortex.
See figure 3.27. Far behind the airplane, possibly all the
way back at the place where the plane left ground effect, the two
trailing vortices join up to form an unbroken16 vortex line.
The air rotates around the vortex line in the direction
indicated in the figure. We know that the airplane, in order
to support its weight, has to yank down on the air. The air that
has been visited by the airplane will have a descending motion
relative to the rest of the air. The trailing vortices mark the
boundary of this region of descending air.
It doesn’t matter
whether you consider the vorticity to be the cause or the effect
of the descending air --- you can’t have one without the other.
Lift must equal weight times load factor, and we can’t easily change
the weight, or the air density, or the wingspan. Therefore, when the
airplane flies at a low airspeed, it must generate lots of
circulation.
* Winglets, etc.
It is a common misconception that the wingtip vortices
are somehow associated with unnecessary spanwise flow, and that
they can be eliminated using fences, winglets,
et cetera. The reality is that the vortices are completely necessary;
you cannot produce lift without producing vortices. By fiddling
with the shape of the wing the designer can control where
along the span the vortices are shed, but there is no way to get
rid of the vorticity without getting rid of the lift.
Winglets encourage the vortices to be shed at the wingtips, not
somewhere else along the span. This produces more lift, since it is
only the amount of span that carries circulation that produces
lift according to the Kutta-Zhukovsky theorem. Still, as a general
rule, adding a pair of six-foot-tall winglets has no aerodynamic
advantage compared to adding six feet of regular, horizontal wing on
each side.17
The bound vortex that produces the circulation that
supports the weight of the airplane should not be confused with
the little vortices produced by vortex generators (to re-energize
the boundary layer) as discussed in section 18.3.
3.12.2 Wake Turbulence
When air traffic control (ATC) tells you “caution --- wake
turbulence” they are really telling you that some previous airplane
has left a wake vortex in your path. The wake
vortex from a large, heavy aircraft can easily flip a small aircraft
upside down.
A heavy airplane like a C5-A flying slowly is the biggest threat,
because it needs lots of circulation to support all that weight at a
low airspeed. You would think that a C5-A with flaps extended would
be the absolute worst, but that is not quite true. The flaps do
increase the circulation-producing capability of the wing, but they do
not extend over the full span. Therefore a part of the
circulation is shed where the flaps end, and another part is shed at
the wingtips. If you fly into the wake of another plane, two
medium-strength vortices will cause you less grief than a single
full-strength vortex. Therefore, you should expect that the threat
from wake vortices is greatest behind an airplane that is heavy
and slow with flaps retracted.
Like a common smoke ring, the wake vortex does not
just sit there, it moves. In this case it moves downward. A
common rule of thumb says they normally descend at about 500 feet
per minute, but the actual rate will depend on the wingspan and
coefficient of lift of the airplane that produced the vortex.
Vortices are part of the air. A vortex in a moving airmass will be
carried along with the air. In fact, the reason wake vortices descend
is that the right vortex is carried downward by the flow field
associated with the left vortex, and the left vortex is carried
downward by the flow field associated with the right vortex.
Superimposed on this vertical motion, the ordinary wind blows
the vortices downwind, usually more-or-less horizontally.
When a vortex line gets close to the ground, it “sees its
reflection”. That is, a vortex at height H moves as if it were
being acted on by a mirror-image vortex a distance H below
ground. This causes wake vortices to spread out --- the left vortex
starts moving to the left, and the right vortex starts moving to the
right.
* Avoiding Wake Turbulence Problems
If you are flying a light aircraft, avoid the airspace
below and behind a large aircraft. Avoiding the area for a minute
or two suffices, because a vortex that is older than that will
have lost enough intensity that it is probably not a serious problem.
If you are landing on the same runway as a preceding
large aircraft, you can avoid its wake vortices by flying a high,
steep approach, and landing at a point well beyond the point where
it landed. Remember, it doesn’t produce vortices unless it is
producing lift. Assuming you are landing into the wind, the wind
can only help clear out the vortices for you.
If you are departing from the same runway as a preceding large
aircraft, you can avoid its vortices --- in theory --- if you leave
the runway at a point well before the point where it did, and if
you make sure that your climb-out profile stays above and/or behind
its. In practice, this might be hard to do, since the other aircraft
might be able to climb more steeply than you can. Also, since you are
presumably taking off into the wind, you need to worry that the
wind might blow the other plane’s vortices toward you.
A light crosswind might keep a vortex on the runway
longer, by opposing its spreading motion. A less common problem is
that a crosswind might blow vortices from a parallel runway onto your
runway.
The technique that requires the least sophistication is to
delay your takeoff a few minutes, so the vortices can spread out and
be weakened by friction.
3.12.3 Induced Drag
Here are some more benefits of understanding circulation
and vortices: it explains induced drag, and
explains why gliders have long skinny
wings. Induced drag is commonly said to be the “cost”
of producing lift. But there is no law of physics that requires
a definite cost. If you could take a very large amount of air
and pull it downward very gently, you could support your weight
at very little cost. The cost you absolutely must pay is the
cost of making that trailing vortex. For every mile that the
airplane flies, each wingtip makes another mile of vortex. The
circulatory motion in that vortex involves nontrivial amounts
of kinetic energy, and that’s why you have induced drag. A long
skinny wing will need less circulation than a short fat wing producing
the same lift. Gliders (which need to fly slowly with minimum
drag) therefore have very long skinny wings (limited only by strength;
it’s hard to build something long, skinny, and strong).
3.12.4 Soft-Field Takeoff
We can now understand why
soft-field takeoff procedure works. When the aircraft is in
ground effect, it “sees its reflection” in the ground. If you are
flying 10 feet above the ground, the effect is the same as having a
mirror-image aircraft flying 10 feet below the ground. Its wingtip
vortices spin in the opposite direction and largely cancel
your wingtip vortices --- greatly reducing induced
drag.
As discussed in section 13.4, in a soft-field takeoff, you
leave the ground at a very low airspeed, and then fly in ground effect
for a while. There will be no wheel friction (or damage) because the
wheels are not touching the ground. There will be very little induced
drag because of the ground effect, and there will
be very little parasite drag because you are going
slowly. The airplane will accelerate like crazy. When you reach
normal flying speed, you raise the nose and fly away.
3.12.5 Bound Vortex
Let’s not forget about the bound vortex, which runs
spanwise from wingtip to wingtip, as shown in figure 3.27.
When you are flying in ground effect, you are influenced by the mirror
image of your bound vortex. Specifically, the flow circulating around
the mirror-image bound vortex will reduce the airflow over your wing.
I call this a pseudo-tailwind.18
Operationally, this means that for any given angle of attack, you need
a higher true airspeed to support the weight of the airplane. This in
turn means that a low-wing airplane will need a longer runway than the
corresponding high-wing airplane, other things being equal. It also
means -- in theory -- that there are tradeoffs involved during a
soft-field takeoff: you want to be sufficiently deep in ground effect
to reduce induced drag, but not so deep that your speeds are unduly
increased. In practice, though, feel free to fly as low as you want
during a soft-field takeoff, since in an ordinary-shaped airplane the
bad effect of the reflected bound vortex (greater speed) never
outweighs the good effect of the reflected trailing vortices (lesser
drag).
As a less-precise way of saying things, you could say that to
compensate for ground effect, any given true airspeed, you need more
coefficient of lift. This explains why all airplanes -- some more so
than others -- exhibit “squirrely” behavior when flying near the
ground, including:
-
Immediately after liftoff, the airplane may seem to leap up a
few feet, as you climb out of the pseudo-tailwind. This is generally
a good thing, because when you become airborne you generally want to
stay airborne.
- Conversely, on landing, the airplane may seem to drop suddenly,
as the pseudo-tailwind takes effect. This is unhelpful, but it’s not
really a big problem once you learn to anticipate it. It does mean
that practicing flaring at altitude (as discussed in
section 12.11.3) will never entirely
prepare you for real landings.
- The wing and the tail will be influenced by ground effect to
different degrees. (This is particularly pronounced if your airplane
has a low wing and a high T-tail, but no airplane is entirely immune.)
That means that when you enter or exit ground effect, there will be
squirrely pitch-trim changes ... in addition to the effects mentioned
in the previous items. Just to rub salt in the wound, the behavior
will be different from flight to flight, depending on how the aircraft
is loaded, i.e. depending on whether the center of mass is near the
forward limit or the aft limit.
During landing, ground effect is a lose/lose/lose proposition. You
regret greater speed, you regret lesser drag, and you regret squirrely
handling.
3.13 Frost on the Wings
The Federal Aviation Regulations prohibit takeoff when there is
frost adhering to the
wings or control surfaces, unless it is polished smooth.
It is interesting that they do not require it to be entirely removed,
just polished smooth. This tells you that roughness is a concern.
(In contrast, the weight of the frost is usually negligible.)
There are very good aerodynamic reasons for this rule:
-
The most obvious effect of roughness on the wings is to create
a lot more drag, as seen in the right panel in figure 3.28,
which shows wind-tunnel data for a real airfoil (the NACA 631-412
airfoil; see reference 23). At cruise angle of attack, the drag
is approximately doubled; at higher angles of attack (corresponding to
lower airspeeds) it is even worse.
- The less obvious (yet more critical) problem is that
roughness causes the wing to stall at a considerably lower angle
of attack, lower coefficient of lift, and higher airspeed. This
can be seen in the left panel of figure 3.28. The pilot
of the frosty airplane could get a very nasty surprise.
As mentioned in section 3.4, Bernoulli’s
principle cannot be trusted when energy is being removed from the
system by friction. Frost, by sticking up into the breeze, is very
effective in removing energy from the system. This tends to
de-energize the boundary layer, leading to separation which produces
the stall.19
It is interesting that at moderate and low angles
of attack (cruise airspeed and above) the frost has hardly any
effect on the coefficient of lift. This reinforces the point
made in section 3.11 that the velocity of the air right
at the surface, relative to the surface, is not what produces
the lift.
An interesting situation arises when the airplane has been sitting
long enough to pick up a big load of frost, but the present air
temperature is slightly above freezing, or only slightly below. The
amount of frost is such that it would take you hours to polish it by
conventional means. You can save yourself a lot of time and effort by
dousing the plane with five-gallon jugs of warm water. That will get
rid of the frost and heat the wings to an above-freezing temperature.
If you take off reasonably promptly the frost won’t have time to
re-form.
3.14 Consistent (Not Cumulative) Laws of Physics
We have seen that several physical principles are
involved in producing lift. Each of the following statements
is correct as far as it goes:
-
The wing produces lift “because” it
is flying at an angle of attack.
- The wing produces lift “because” of
circulation.
- The wing produces lift “because” of
Bernoulli’s principle.
- The wing produces lift “because” of Newton’s law of action and
reaction.
We now examine the relationship between these physical
principles. Do we get a little bit of lift because of Bernoulli,
and a little bit more because of Newton? No, the laws of physics
are not cumulative in this way.
There is only one lift-producing process. Each of
the explanations itemized above concentrates on a different aspect
of this one process. The wing produces circulation in proportion
to its angle of attack (and its airspeed). This circulation means
the air above the wing is moving faster. This in turn produces
low pressure in accordance with Bernoulli’s principle. The low
pressure pulls up on the wing and pulls down on the air in accordance
with all of Newton’s laws.
3.15 Momentum in the Air
For an airplane in steady flight, the forces must balance. We know
from the Newton’s third law20 that for every force there must be an equal and
opposite force somewhere, but the special idea here is that
there must be an equal and opposite force locally to maintain
equilibrium.
The earth pulls down on the airplane (by gravity). This force is
balanced locally because the air pulls up on the airplane (by means of
pressure near the wings). Of course the same pressure that pulls up
on the airplane pulls down on the air. This air exerts a pressure on
neighboring parcels of air, which act on other parcels, and so forth
all the way to the earth’s surface. At the earth’s surface, pressure
pushes up on the air and pushes down on the earth. The downward force
on the earth is just enough to balance the fact that the airplane is
pulling up on the earth (by gravity).
Since force is just momentum per unit time, the same process can be
described by a big “closed circuit” of momentum flow. The earth
transfers downward momentum to the airplane (by gravity). The
airplane transfers downward momentum to the air (by pressure near the
wings). The momentum is then transferred from air parcel to air
parcel to air parcel. Finally the momentum is transferred back to the
earth (by pressure at the surface), completing the cycle. There is no
net accumulation of momentum anywhere (in long-term steady flight).
You need to look at figure 3.27 to get the whole story. If
you look only at things like figure 3.2, you will never
understand how the momentum balance works, because that figure
doesn’t tell the whole story. You might be tempted to make the
following erroneous argument:
-
In figure 3.2, there is some upward momentum
ahead of the wing, and some downward momentum behind the wing.
- As the wing moves along, it carries the pattern of upwash and
downwash along with it.
- Therefore the total amount of upward and downward momentum in
the air is not changing as the wing moves along. No momentum is
being transferred to the air. Therefore no lift is being produced.
This is nonsense!
To solve this paradox, remember that figure 3.2 shows
only the flow associated with the bound vortex
that runs along the wing, and does not show the flow associated with
the trailing vortices. That is, it is only
valid relatively close to the wing and relatively far from the
wingtips.
Look at that figure and choose a point, say, half a chord ahead of the
wing. You will see that the air has some upward
momentum at that point. All points above and below that point
within the frame of the figure also have upward momentum. But
it turns out that if you go up or down from that point more than a
wingspan or so, you will find that all the air has downward momentum.
This downward flow is associated with the trailing vortices. Near the
wing the bound vortex dominates, but if you go higher or lower the
trailing vortices dominate.
In fact, if you add up all the momentum in an entire column of air,
for any column ahead of the wing, you will find that the total
vertical momentum is zero. The total momentum associated with the
trailing vortices exactly cancels the total momentum associated with
the bound vortex.
If you consider points directly ahead of the wing (not above or
below), a slightly different sort of cancellation occurs. The flow
associated with the trailing vortices is never enough to actually
reverse the flow associated with the bound vortex; there is always
some upwash directly ahead of the wing, no matter how far ahead.
But the contribution associated with the trailing vortices greatly
reduces the magnitude, so the upwash pretty soon becomes negligible.
This is why it is reasonable to speak of “undisturbed” air ahead of
the airplane.
Behind the wing there is no cancellation of any kind; the
downwash of the wing is only reinforced by the downward flow
associated with the trailing vortices. There is plenty of downward
momentum in any air column behind the wing.
This gives us a simple picture of the airplane’s interaction with the
air: There is downward momentum in any air column that passes through
the vortex loop (which is shown in
figure 3.27). There is no such momentum in any air column that
is ahead of the wing, outboard of the trailing vortices, or aft of the
starting vortex.
So now we can understand the momentum balance: (1) As the airplane
flies along minute by minute, it imparts more and more downward
momentum to the air, by enlarging the region of downward-moving air
behind it. (2) The air imparts downward momentum to the earth. (3)
The gravitational interaction between earth and airplane completes the
circuit.
3.16 Summary: How a Wing Produces Lift
-
The flow pattern created by a wing is the sum of the obstacle
effect (which is significant only very near the wing, and is the same
whether or not the wing is producing lift) plus the circulation effect
(which extends for huge distances above and below the wing, and is
proportional to the amount of lift, other things being equal).
- A wing is very effective at changing the speed of the air.
The air above is speeded up relative to the corresponding air below.
Each air parcel gets a temporary change in speed and a permanent
offset in position.
- Bernoulli’s principle asserts that a given parcel of air has
high velocity when it has low pressure, and vice versa. This is an
excellent approximation under a wide range of conditions. This can be
seen as a consequence of Newton’s laws.
- Below-atmospheric pressure above the wing is
much more pronounced than above-atmospheric pressure below the
wing.
- There is significant upwash ahead of the wing
and even more downwash behind the wing.
- The front stagnation line is well below and behind
the leading edge.
- The rear stagnation line is at or very near the
trailing edge. The Kutta condition says the air wants to flow
cleanly off the sharp trailing edge. This determines the amount
of circulation.
- An airfoil does not have to be curved
on top and/or flat on the bottom in order to work. A rounded
leading edge is a good idea, but even a barn door will fly.
- Air passing above and below the wing does not do so in
equal time. When lift is being produced, every air parcel passing
above the wing wing arrives substantially early (compared to
corresponding parcel below the wing) even though it has a longer path.
- Most of the air above the wing arrives early in absolute terms
(compared to undisturbed air), but this is not important, and the
exceptions are doubly unimportant.
- Lift is equal to circulation, times airspeed,
times density, times wingspan.
- Well below the stalling angle of attack, the
coefficient of lift is proportional to the angle of attack; the
circulation is proportional to the coefficient of lift times the
airspeed.
- Air is a fluid, not a bunch of bullets. The fluid has
pressure and velocity everywhere, not just where it meets the surface
of the wing.
- There is downward momentum in any air column behind the wing.
There is zero momentum in any air column ahead of the wing, outboard
of the trailing vortices, or aft of the starting vortex.
- Vortex lines cannot have loose ends; therefore
you cannot produce lift without producing wake vortices.
- Induced drag arises when you have low speed and/or short span,
because you are visiting a small amount of air and yanking it down
violently, producing strong wake vortices. In contrast there is very
little induced drag when you have high speed and/or long span,
because you are visiting a large amount of air, pulling it down
gently, producing weak wake vortices.
- 1
- These simulations are based on a
number of assumptions, including that the viscosity is small (but not
zero), the airspeed is small compared to the speed of sound, the
airflow is not significantly turbulent, no fluid can flow through
the surface of the wing, and the points of interest are close to
the wing and not too close to either wingtip.
- 2
- To be more precise: there is no wind in either of
the two dimensions that show up in figure 3.3.
There might be some flow in the third dimension (i.e. spanwise
along the stagnation line) but that isn’t relevant to the present
discussion.
- 3
- ... although for turbulent
flow, the stream lines can get so tangled that they lose any useful
meaning.
- 4
- This was defined
in section 2.12; see also section 3.4.
- 5
- By Bernoulli’s principle, the
slowest air has the highest pressure. At the stagnation lines, the
air is stopped --- which as slow as it can get! See
section 3.4, especially figure 3.8.
- 6
- This low pressure is associated with fast-moving air
in this region. You may be wondering why some of this fast-moving air
arrives at the trailing edge late. The answer is that it spent a lot
of time hanging around near the leading-edge stagnation line,
moving much slower than the ambient air. Then as it passes the
wing, it moves faster than ambient, but not faster enough to make up
for the lost time.
- 7
- Of course, if there were no atmospheric pressure
below the wing, there would be no way to have reduced pressure above
the wing. Fundamentally, atmospheric pressure below the wing is
responsible for supporting the weight of the airplane. The point is
that pressure changes above the wing are more pronounced than the
pressure changes below the wing.
- 8
- Newton’s laws
are discussed in section 19.1.
- 9
- This is
a first-order equation, valid whenever the
pressure changes are a small percentage of the total atmospheric
pressure. See section 3.4.3 for more on this.
- 10
- ... but not always. See section 18.4 for a
counterexample.
- 11
- The
airfoil designations aren’t just serial numbers; the digits actually
contain information about the shape of the airfoil. For details
see reference 23.
- 12
- We are still
assuming negligible viscosity, small percentage pressure changes, no
turbulence in the fluid, no fluid flowing through the surface of the
wing, and a few other reasonable assumptions.
- 13
- Actually, you
never get 100% of the circulation predicted by the Kutta condition,
especially for crummy airfoils like barn doors. For nice airfoils
with a rounded leading edge, you get something like 99% of the
Kutta circulation.
- 14
- The second author’s name is properly spelled
Жуковский.
When Russian scientists write this name in English, they almost always
spell it Zhukovsky ... which is the spelling used in this book. Not
coincidentally, that conforms to standard transliteration rules and is
a reasonable guide to the pronunciation. Beware: you may encounter
the same name spelled other ways. In particular, “Joukowski” was
popular once upon a time, for no good reason.
- 15
- This assumes that the loop is big enough
to include the places where circulation is being produced (i.e. the
wing and the boundary layer).
- 16
- There is a rule
that says vortex lines can never have loose ends. They form
closed loops, like magnetic field lines. This is not a mere law of
physics; it is a mathematical identity.
- 17
- This assumes the goal is to produce wings, as
opposed to (say) rudders. Also note that the winglet solution may
provide a practical advantage when taxiing and parking. This is why
Boeing put winglets (instead of additional span) on the 747-400 ---
they wanted to be able to park in a standard slot at the airport.
- 18
- It’s only a
pseudo-tailwind, not a real tailwind, because wind is officially
supposed to be measured in the ambient air, someplace where the
air is not disturbed by the airplane --- or by its mirror image.
Similarly airspeed is measured relative to the ambient air.
- 19
- Boundary layers, separation,
etc. are discussed in more detail in section 18.3.
- 20
- See
section 19.1 for a discussion of the
laws of motion.
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