Aerodynamics-2
Aerodynamics-2
Aerodynamics-2
AE 321 – Aerodynamics II
SUBSONIC
AERODYNAMICS
(Topic 1 and 2)
Instructor I : Engr. Michael Jean A. Tenefrancia
1.) Review of Aircraft Propulsion Systems
- Reciprocating Engine
- Turbine Engine
2.) Steady, Level, Unaccelerated Flight
- Introduction to Flight Performance
- Equations of Motion
- Thrust Required for Level, Unaccelerated Flight
- Thrust Available and Maximum Available
- Power Required for Level, Unaccelerated Flight
- Power Available and Maximum Velocity
- Altitude Effects on Power Required and Power
Available
What is Aircraft Performance?
We will answer questions such
as:
How fast?
How high?
How far?
How long can an aircraft fly?
What is Aircraft Performance?
We will talk about static and dynamic
performance.
COVERAGE:
I. PRELIMINARIES
2.) Wing Area, S – the area of the projection of the actual outline on the
plane of the chord. Ailerons and flaps are counted as part of the wing
area.
3.) Chord Length, c – the length of the projection of the airfoil section on
its chord.
4.) Aspect Ratio, AR – the ratio of the square of the span to the wing
area.
Aspect Ratio:
b S
AR AR 2
Ca Ca
Ct
TR
Cr
6.) Mean Aerodynamic Chord, MAC - the chord of an imaginary simple rectangular wing
which, throughout the flight range, will have the same force vectors as the actual wing.
Mean Geometric Chord ‘MGC’ is sometimes synonymous to MAC. For a rectangular
monoplane wing, the MGC is identical with chord of the wing section
2 (Ct Cr ) CtCr 2
MAC
3 Ct Cr
TYPES OF
DRAG
What are the different types of drag?
Skin friction drag
Pressure drag
Profile drag
Interference drag
Parasite drag
Induced drag
Zero-lift drag
Drag due to lift
Wave drag
Skin-friction drag.
Drag due to frictional
shear stress integrated
over the surface.
Pressure drag due to
flow separation (form
drag): The drag due
to the pressure
imbalance in the
drag direction
caused by separated
flow.
Profile drag. The sum of skin friction drag
and form drag. (The term profile drag is
usually used in conjunction with two-
dimensional airfoils; it is sometimes called
section drag.)
Interference drag. An
additional pressure drag
caused by the mutual
interaction of the flow fields
around each component of the
airplane. The total drag of the
combined body is usually
greater than that of the sum of
its individual parts; the
difference is the interference
drag.
Parasite drag. The term used for
the profile drag for a complete
airplane. It is that portion of the
total drag associated with skin
friction and pressure drag due to
flow separation, integrated over the
complete airplane surface. It
includes interference drag.
Induced drag. A pressure
drag due to the pressure
imbalance in the drag
direction caused by the
induced flow (downwash)
associated with the
vortices created at the
tips of finite wings.
Zero-lift drag. (Usually used in
conjunction with a complete airplane
configuration.) The parasite drag that
exists when the airplane is at its zero-lift
angle of attack, that is, when the lift of
the airplane is zero.
Drag due to lift. (Usually used in conjunction
with a complete airplane.) That portion of the
total airplane drag measured above the zero-
lift drag. It consists of the change in parasite
drag when the airplane is at an angle of attack
different from the zero-lift angle, plus the
induced drag from the wings and other lifting
components of the airplane.
Wave drag. The pressure
drag associated with
transonic and supersonic
flow (or shock waves,
hence the name). It can
be expressed as the sum
the zero-lift wave drag
and wave drag due to lift.
INDUCED DRAG
CALCULATION
Wing Tip Vortices
Wing Downwash
Effects of Wing Downwash
The “local relative wind that is
canted downward from the
original direction of V free stream
has two consequences:
Where:
CL – coefficient of Lift
AR – Wing Aspect Ratio
e – span efficiency factor
For elliptical planforms, e = 1; for all other planforms, e < 1. Thus, CD,i and hence induced
drag is a minimum for an elliptical planform.
Since
Therefore...
Where:
CD – total drag
Cd – profile drag (Cd,f + Cd, p)
CD,i – induced drag
How much of the total
Drag of an airplane is
the Induced Drag?
Total Drag
Drag Polar
A wing or airfoil have its own drag polar
2
C
C D Cd L
πeAR
profile drag
2
C
C D C D ,0 L
eAR zero-lift drag
Drag Polar of a Complete Airplane
2
C
C D C D ,0 C D , 0 C D ,i
L
eAR
induced drag
parasite drag coefficient
Oswald’s coefficient at
efficiency zero lift
factor
Thrust required for steady level flight
at given speed.
Thrust Required for Level, Unaccelerated Flight
at a given velocity
NOTE:
TR D Thrust Required is
a function of
velocity.
It has two
components.
It has a minimum.
Thrust Required for Level, Unaccelerated Flight
TR D
2
1 W 1
TR V S C Do (
2
)( )
2 1 V S eAR
2
2
Thrust Required for Level, Unaccelerated Flight
2
1 W 1
TR V S C Do (
2
)( )
2 1 V S eAR
2
2
zero-lift lift-induced
thrust required thrust required
Thrust Required: Alternative Approach
W
TR
CL / CD
Thrust Required for Level, Unaccelerated Flight
1/ 2
2 1 W
VTR ,min
C Do eAR S
At TRmin
2
C
C D,0 L
C D ,i
eAR
Thus,
CL eAR / 4C
C D ,0
D max
Calculate the maximum velocity for the sample jet plane.
Intersection of TR
curve and maximum
TA defines maximum
flight speed of airplane.
1
T W A
W T
2
4C 2
A
D,0
W max S S W max eAR
Vmax
CD,0
Maximum Velocity: Design Considerations
1
T W W TA
2
4C D , 0
2
A
W max S S W max eAR
Vmax
C D ,0
A
W max S S W max eAR
Vmax
C D ,0
At PRmin
3C D , 0 C Di
Thus,
3
C 32 1 3eAR 4
L
CD 4 C 13
max D,0
How do we compute for (L /D)
3/2
max?
3
C 2
L
3
3C D , 0eAR
3
4
1 3eAR
4
CD 4 C 1
4 C D ,0 3
max D ,0
(L/D)max VS (L /D)
3/2
max
Locating (L/D)max in the PR curve
How do we compute for PR,min?
You can
substitute Or you can substitute
3
2
1
2 C 2 3
1 3eAR 4
1 W L
V , PR ,min CD 4 C 13
3C D , 0eAR S max D,0
to to
2
1 W 1 2W 3 1
PR V S C Do (
3
)( ) PR
2 1 V S eAR
2 ρ S C 3 2
L
CD
From the intersection of the PA and PR, figure 2.19 shows that at an altitude, the
minimum velocity can be greater than the actual stalling velocity. This means that the
aircraft at an altitude would stall beyond the minimum velocity point depicted in the
graph.
EXAMPLE
1. Constructing thrust required versus velocity curve. A light, single-engine,
propeller driven airplane has the given specifications listed below, at SSLC
conditions:
b = 35.8 ft S = 174 ft2
W = 2950 lbs Fuel Capacity = 65 gal. of aviation gas
c = 0.45 lb/HP-hr CDO = 0.025
e = 0.8 ⴄ = 0.8
Calculate the coefficient of lift and drag, lift to drag ratio and the thrust required for
a velocity of 100 ft/s.
EXAMPLE
2. For problem #1, calculate the minimum drag and the velocity for minimum drag.
at SSLC conditions:
b = 35.8 ft S = 174 ft2
W = 2950 lbs Fuel Capacity = 65 gal. of aviation gas
c = 0.45 lb/HP-hr CDO = 0.025
e = 0.8 ⴄ= 0.8
EXAMPLE
3. For problem #1, calculate the power available, and power required if the engine
is rated at 150 HP.
At SSLC conditions:
b = 35.8 ft S = 174 ft2
W = 2950 lbs Fuel Capacity = 65 gal. of aviation gas
c = 0.45 lb/HP-hr CDO = 0.025
e = 0.8 ⴄ= 0.8
EXAMPLE
4. For problem #1, calculate the minimum power required and its corresponding
velocity.
At SSLC conditions:
b = 35.8 ft S = 174 ft2
W = 2950 lbs Fuel Capacity = 65 gal. of aviation gas
c = 0.45 lb/HP-hr CDO = 0.025
e = 0.8 ⴄ= 0.8
EXAMPLE
5. For 100 ft/s of sea level velocity, what is the velocity required needed to fly an
aircraft, steady and level at 10000 ft. The density at 10,000 ft is 0.001755 slug/ft3.
ANY
QUESTIONS?
ACTIVITY
TIME!