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Aerodynamics Basics PDF

Basic Aerodynamics describes key concepts in aerodynamics including: 1) Lift is generated by the wing according to Bernoulli's principle - air flowing over the wing at a greater speed results in lower pressure above the wing. 2) Stalls occur when the critical angle of attack is exceeded, disrupting airflow over the wing. This causes the nose of the aircraft to drop suddenly. 3) As altitude and speed increase, aircraft encounter challenges like higher stall speeds and shockwaves forming over the wing from supersonic airflow portions. Vortex generators and wing design help address these issues.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
349 views39 pages

Aerodynamics Basics PDF

Basic Aerodynamics describes key concepts in aerodynamics including: 1) Lift is generated by the wing according to Bernoulli's principle - air flowing over the wing at a greater speed results in lower pressure above the wing. 2) Stalls occur when the critical angle of attack is exceeded, disrupting airflow over the wing. This causes the nose of the aircraft to drop suddenly. 3) As altitude and speed increase, aircraft encounter challenges like higher stall speeds and shockwaves forming over the wing from supersonic airflow portions. Vortex generators and wing design help address these issues.

Uploaded by

Prasad Raikar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Basic Aerodynamics

Basic Aerodynamics
Dartmouth Flying Club
October 10, 2002
Andreas Bentz

Basic Aerodynamics

Lift
Bernoullis Principle

Energy



Definition: Energy is the ability to do work.


Energy cannot be created or destroyed. We
can only change its form.
A fluid in motion has (mainly) two forms of
energy:
kinetic energy (velocity),
 potential energy (pressure).


The Venturi Tube and Bernoullis Principle

kinetic energy
(velocity)

velocity
increases

potential energy
(pressure)

pressure
decreases

Lift: Wing Section




Air flows toward the low pressure area above the wing:
upwash and downwash.
Newtons third law of motion: to every action there is
an equal and opposite reaction.


The reaction to downwash is, in fact, that misunderstood


force called lift. Schiff p. 8

relative low pressure

upwash

downwash
5

Angle of Attack


The angle of attack is the angle between the chord line


and the average relative wind.
Greater angle of attack creates more lift (up to a
point).

chord

total
lift
line

average
relative w
ind

Lift and Induced Drag




Lift acts through the center of pressure, and


perpendicular to the relative wind.
This creates induced drag.
induced drag

chord

effective
lift

total
lift

line

average
relative w
ind

Got Lift? Flaps




Flaps increase
the wings
camber.


Some also
increase the
wing area
(fowler flap).

Almost all jet


transports also
have leading
edge flaps.
8

Too Much Lift? Spoilers




Spoilers destroy lift:


to slow down in flight (flight spoilers);
 for roll control in flight (flight spoilers);
 to slow down on the ground (ground spoilers).


Basic Aerodynamics

Side Effects
There is no such things as a free lunch.

Drag: Total Drag (Power Required) Curve


1,400
1,200

max.
lift/drag

1,000

best glide
800

induced drag
parasite drag


resistance

total drag

400
Drag (lbs)

600

200

50

100

150

200

Indicated Airspeed (knots)


11

Wingtip Vortices and Wake Turbulence

relative low pressure

Wingtip vortices create drag:


ground effect;
 tip tanks, drooped wings, winglets.


12

Basic Aerodynamics

Stability
Longitudinal: Static, Dynamic
Lateral

weight

down lift

lift

Longitudinal Stability

Static stability (tendency to return after control input)






up elevator increases downward lift, angle of attack increases;


lift increases, drag increases, aircraft slows;
less downward lift, angle of attack decreases (nose drops).
14

weight

down lift

lift

Aside: CG and Center of Pressure Location

Aft CG increases speed:






the tail creates less lift (less drag);


the tail creates less down force (wings need to create less lift).
This also decreases stall speed (lower angle of attack reqd).
15

Lateral Stability


If one wing is lowered (e.g. by turbulence), the


airplane sideslips.
The lower wing has a greater angle of attack (more
lift).
 This raises the lower wing.


ive
t
a
l
re
d
wi n

ive
t
a
l
re
d
wi n
16

Directional Stability


As the airplane turns to the left (e.g. in


turbulence), the vertical stabilizer creates lift
toward the left.


The airplane turns to the right.

17

Speed Stability v. Reverse Command




Power is work
performed by the
engine. (Thrust is
force created by the
propeller.)

Suppose airspeed
decreases.


Front Side: Power is


greater than required:
aircraft accelerates.
Back Side: Power is
less than required:
aircraft decelerates.

1,400
100%

Percent horsepower

Power curve:

1,200

max.
endurance

1,000

ca. 75% of
max.
lift/drag

Drag (thrust required)

800
50%
600
400
200

50

100

150

200

Indicated Airspeed (knots)


18

Basic Aerodynamics

Turning Flight
Differential Lift

Turning Flight


More lift on one wing than


on the other results in roll
around the longitudinal
axis (bank).


Lowering the aileron on one


wing results in greater lift
and raises that wing.

20

Turning Flight, contd




More lift on one wing than


on the other results in roll
around the longitudinal
axis (bank).





Lowering the aileron on one


wing results in greater lift
and raises that wing.
This tilts lift sideways.
The horizontal component
of lift makes the airplane
turn.
(To maintain altitude, more
total lift needs to be created:
higher angle of attack reqd)

Centrifugal
Force

21

Adverse Yaw and Frise Aileron




However, more lift on one


wing creates more
induced drag on that
wing: adverse yaw.
Adverse yaw is corrected
by rudder application.
Frise ailerons counter
adverse yaw:


They create parasite drag


on the up aileron.
22

Basic Aerodynamics

Stalls
Too Much of a Good Thing

Stalls

A wing section stalls when its critical angle of


attack is exceeded.


Indicated stall speed depends on how much lift the


wing needs to create (weight, G loading).
24

Stalls, contd

weight

The disturbed airflow over the wing hits the tail and the
horizontal stabilizer. This is the buffet.
Eventually, there will not be enough airflow over the
horizontal stabilizer, and it loses its downward lift. The
nose drops: the stall breaks.

lift

25

Stalls, contd


The whole wing


never stalls at the
same time.


Power-on stalls in
most light singles
allow the wing to
stall more fully.
Why?

Where do you
want the wing to
stall last?


Ailerons
26

Stalls, contd (Stalls with one Engine Inop.)




Stalls in a
twin with
one engine
inoperative
lead to roll
or spin
entry:


Propeller
slipstream
delays
stall.
27

Stalls, contd


Stall strips make the wing stall sooner.

28

Stalls, contd


Definition: The angle of incidence is the acute angle


between the longitudinal axis of the airplane and the
chord line of the wing.
Twist in the wing makes the wing root stall first:


The angle of incidence decreases away from the wing root.

29

Preventing Stalls

Slats direct airflow over the wing to avoid


boundary layer separation.
Slots are similar but fixed, near the wingtips.


Delays stall near the wingtip (aileron effectiveness).


30

Stalls and Turns




Greater angles of bank require greater lift so


that:
the vertical component of lift equals weight (to
maintain altitude),
 the horizontal component of lift equals centrifugal
force (constant radius, coordinated, turn)


31

Stalls and Turns, contd




Load factor
(multiple of
aircraft gross
weight the
wings
support)
increases
with bank
angle.
Stall speed
increases
accordingly.

limit load
factor:

acrobatic 6G

Normal 3.8G

32

Turns



As bank increases, load factor increases.


But: as airspeed increases, rate of turn
decreases.
In order to make a 3 degree per second turn, at 500
Kts the airplane would have to bank more than 50
degrees.
 Uncomfortable (unsafe?) load factor.


This is why for jet-powered airplanes, a


standard rate turn is 1.5 degrees per second.
33

Basic Aerodynamics

High and Fast


In the Flight Levels

High and Fast




Mach is the ratio of the true airspeed to the


speed of sound.
Speed of sound decreases with temperature.
 Temperature decreases with altitude.
 At higher altitudes, the same indicated airspeed
leads to higher Mach numbers.
 Conversely: at higher altitudes, a certain Mach
number can be achieved at a lower indicated
airspeed.


The indicated stall speed increases with


altitude (compressibility).
35

High and Fast, contd




At high subsonic speeds, portions of the wing can


induce supersonic airflow (critical Mach number Mcrit).
Where the airflow slows to subsonic speeds, a
shockwave forms.
The shockwave causes boundary layer separation.


High-speed buffet, aileron snatch, Mach tuck.


velocity
increases

velocity decreases,
shockwave forms
boundary layer
separates

36

High and Fast, contd




Vortex generators delay boundary layer


separation.

37

High and Fast, contd




With
altitude:


indicated
stall speed
(low speed
buffet)
increases;
indicated
airspeed
that results
in critical
Mcrit
decreases.

coffin corner
38

References


De Remer D (1992) Aircraft Systems for Pilots


Casper: IAP
FAA (1997) Pilots Handbook of Aeronautical
Knowledge AC61-23C Newcastle: ASA
Lowery J (2001) Professional Pilot Ames: Iowa
State Univ. Press
Schiff B (1985) The Proficient Pilot vol. 1 New
York: Macmillan
U.S. Navy (1965) Aerodynamics for Naval
Aviators Newcastle: ASA
39

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