Airfoil
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For the kite, see foil kite.
Image:Airfoil.svg
Various components of the airfoil.
An airfoil (in American English, or aerofoil in British English) is the shape of a wing or blade (of a propeller, rotor or turbine) or sail as seen in cross-section. An airfoil shaped body moved through a fluid produces a force perpendicular to the motion called lift. Subsonic flight airfoils have a characteristic shape with a rounded leading edge, followed by a sharp trailing edge, often with asymmetric camber. Airfoils designed with water as the working fluid are also called hydrofoils.
IntroductionA fixed-wing aircraft's wings, horizontal, and vertical stabilizers are built with airfoil-shaped cross sections, as are helicopter rotor blades. Airfoils are also found in propellers, fans, compressors and turbines. Sails are also airfoils, and the underwater surfaces of sailboats, such as the centerboard and keel, are similar in cross-section and operate on the same principles as airfoils. Swimming and flying creatures and even many plants and sessile organisms employ airfoils; common examples being bird wings, the bodies of fishes, and the shape of sand dollars. An airfoil-shaped wing can create downforce on an automobile or other motor vehicle, improving traction. While any object with an angle of attack in a moving fluid, such as a flat plate, a building, or the deck of a bridge, will generate an aerodynamic force perpendicular to the flow called lift, airfoils are more efficient lifting shapes, able to generate more lift (up to a point), and to generate lift with less drag.
A lift and drag curve obtained in wind tunnel testing is shown on the right. The curve represents an airfoil with a positive camber so some lift is produced at zero angle of attack. With increased angle of attack, lift increases in a roughly linear relation, called the slope of the lift curve. At about eighteen degrees this airfoil stalls and lift falls off quickly beyond that. Drag is least at a slight negative angle for this particular airfoil, and increases rapidly with higher angles. Airfoil design is a major facet of aerodynamics. Various airfoils serve different flight regimes. Asymmetric airfoils can generate lift at zero angle of attack, while a symmetric airfoil may better suit frequent inverted flight as in an aerobatic airplane. Supersonic airfoils are much more angular in shape and can have a very sharp leading edge. A supercritical airfoil, with its low camber, reduces transonic drag divergence. Moveable high-lift devices, flaps and sometimes slats, are fitted to airfoils on almost every aircraft. Schemes have been devised to describe airfoils — an example is the NACA system. Various ad-hoc naming systems are also used. An example of a general purpose airfoil that finds wide application, and predates the NACA system, is the Clark-Y. Today, airfoils are designed for specific functions using inverse design programs such as PROFIL, XFOIL and AeroFoil[1]. Modern aircraft wings may have different airfoil sections along the wing span, each one optimized for the conditions in each section of the wing. Image:PSU-90-125.PNG
An airfoil designed for winglets (PSU 90-125WL)
Airfoil terminologyThe various terms related to airfoils are defined below:[1]
Image:Denney.kitfox.g-foxc.arp.jpg
An airfoil section is nicely displayed at the tip of this Denney Kitfox aircraft (G-FOXC), built in 1991.
Thin Airfoil TheoryA simple mathematical theory of two-dimensional (i.e. with infinite span) thin airfoils was devised by Ludwig Prandtl and others in the 1920s. The airfoil is modeled as a thin lifting mean-line (camber line). The mean-line, y(x), is considered to produce a distribution of vorticity Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \gamma (s) along the line, s. By the Kutta condition, the vorticity is zero at the trailing edge. Since the airfoil is thin, x (chord position) can be used instead of s, and all angles can be approximated as small. From the Biot-Savart law, this vorticity produces a flow field Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): w(s) where Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): w(x) = \frac{1} {(2 \pi)} \int_{0}^{c} \frac {\gamma (x')}{(x-x')} dx'
Since there is no flow normal to the curved surface of the airfoil, w(x) balances that from the component of main flow V which is locally normal to the plate - the main flow is locally inclined to the plate by an angle Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \alpha - dy/dx . That is Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): V . (\alpha - dy/dx) = w(x) = \frac{1} {(2 \pi)} \int_{0}^{c} \frac {\gamma (x')}{(x-x')} dx'
Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \ x = c(1 - cos (\theta ))/2 , as a Fourier series in Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): A_n sin(n \theta) with a modified lead term Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): A_0 (1+cos (\theta)) /sin(\theta)
The coefficients are given by Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): A_0 = \alpha - \frac {1}{\pi} \int_{0}^{\pi} ((dy/dx) . d\theta
Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \rho V \int_{0}^{c} \gamma (x). dx
Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \ C_L = 2 \pi (A_0 + A_1/2)
, as Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \ C_M = - 0.5 \pi (A_0+A_1-A_2/2)
Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \ C_M(1/4c) = - \pi /4 (A_1 - A_2) . From this it follows that the center of lift is aft of the 'quarter-chord' point 0.25 c, by Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \ \Delta x /c = \pi /4 ((A_1-A_2)/C_L)
Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \frac { \partial (C_{M'}) }{ \partial (C_L)} = 0 References (thin airfoil/aerofoil theory)
See also
External links
References
af:Vlerkprofiel de:Profil (Strömungslehre) es:Perfil alar fa:ماهیواره fr:Profil (aéronautique) hr:Aeroprofil krila it:Profilo alare nl:Vleugel (vliegtuig) ja:翼型 pl:Profil lotniczy pt:Aerofólio ru:Профиль (аэродинамика) tr:Kanat profili |


