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12/22/2018 Airfoil - Wikipedia

Airfoil
An airfoil (American English) or aerofoil (British
English) is the cross-sectional shape of a wing, blade
(of a propeller, rotor, or turbine), or sail (as seen in
cross-section).

An airfoil-shaped body moved through a fluid


produces an aerodynamic force. The component of
this force perpendicular to the direction of motion is
called lift. The component parallel to the direction of
motion is called drag. Subsonic flight airfoils have a
characteristic shape with a rounded leading edge,
followed by a sharp trailing edge, often with a
symmetric curvature of upper and lower surfaces.
Foils of similar function designed with water as the
working fluid are called hydrofoils.

The lift on an airfoil is primarily the result of its


angle of attack and shape. When oriented at a
suitable angle, the airfoil deflects the oncoming air
(for fixed-wing aircraft, a downward force), resulting
in a force on the airfoil in the direction opposite to Examples of airfoils in nature and within various vehicles.
the deflection. This force is known as aerodynamic Though not strictly an airfoil, the dolphin flipper obeys the
force and can be resolved into two components: lift same principles in a different fluid medium.
and drag. Most foil shapes require a positive angle of
attack to generate lift, but cambered airfoils can
generate lift at zero angle of attack. This "turning" of the air in the vicinity of the airfoil creates curved streamlines,
resulting in lower pressure on one side and higher pressure on the other. This pressure difference is accompanied by a
velocity difference, via Bernoulli's principle, so the resulting flowfield about the airfoil has a higher average velocity on
the upper surface than on the lower surface. The lift force can be related directly to the average top/bottom velocity
difference without computing the pressure by using the concept of circulation and the Kutta-Joukowski
theorem.[1][2][3][4]

Contents
Overview
Airfoil terminology
Thin airfoil theory
Derivation of thin airfoil theory
See also
Notes
References
External links

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Overview
A 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/hydrofoils: common examples being bird wings, the
Streamlines around a NACA 0012 airfoil at
bodies of fish, and the shape of sand dollars. An airfoil-
moderate angle of attack
shaped wing can create downforce on an automobile or other
motor vehicle, improving traction.

Any object, such as a flat plate, a building, or the deck of a


bridge, with an angle of attack in a moving fluid will generate
an aerodynamic force perpendicular to the flow. Airfoils are
more efficient lifting shapes, able to generate more lift than
similarly sized flat plates, and to generate lift with
significantly 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 18 degrees
this airfoil stalls, and lift falls off quickly beyond that. The
drop in lift can be explained by the action of the upper-
surface boundary layer, which separates and greatly thickens Lift and Drag curves for a typical airfoil
over the upper surface at and past the stall angle. The
thickened boundary layer's displacement thickness changes
the airfoil's effective shape, in particular it reduces its effective camber, which modifies the overall flow field so as to
reduce the circulation and the lift. The thicker boundary layer also causes a large increase in pressure drag, so that the
overall drag increases sharply near and past the stall point.

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. In the region of the ailerons and near a wingtip a symmetric airfoil can be used to increase the range of
angles of attack to avoid spin–stall. Thus a large range of angles can be used without boundary layer separation.
Subsonic airfoils have a round leading edge, which is naturally insensitive to the angle of attack. The cross section is
not strictly circular, however: the radius of curvature is increased before the wing achieves maximum thickness to
minimize the chance of boundary layer separation. This elongates the wing and moves the point of maximum
thickness back from the leading edge.

Supersonic airfoils are much more angular in shape and can have a very sharp leading edge, which is very sensitive to
angle of attack. A supercritical airfoil has its maximum thickness close to the leading edge to have a lot of length to
slowly shock the supersonic flow back to subsonic speeds. Generally such transonic airfoils and also the supersonic
airfoils have a low camber to reduce drag divergence. Modern aircraft wings may have different airfoil sections along
the wing span, each one optimized for the conditions in each section of the wing.

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Movable high-lift devices, flaps and sometimes slats, are fitted to airfoils on almost every aircraft. A trailing edge flap
acts similarly to an aileron; however, it, as opposed to an aileron, can be retracted partially into the wing if not used.

A laminar flow wing has a maximum thickness in the middle camber line. Analyzing the Navier–Stokes equations
in the linear regime shows that a negative pressure gradient along the flow has the same effect as reducing the speed.
So with the maximum camber in the middle, maintaining a laminar flow over a larger percentage of the wing at a
higher cruising speed is possible. However, some surface contamination will disrupt the laminar flow, making it
turbulent. For example, with rain on the wing, the flow will be turbulent. Under certain conditions, insect debris on
the wing will cause the loss of small regions of laminar flow as well.[5] Before NASA's research in the 1970s and 1980s
the aircraft design community understood from application attempts in the WW II era that laminar flow wing designs
were not practical using common manufacturing tolerances and surface imperfections. That belief changed after new
manufacturing methods were developed with composite materials (e.g., graphite fiber) and machined metal methods
were introduced. NASA's research in the 1980s revealed the practicality and usefulness of laminar flow wing designs
and opened the way for laminar flow applications on modern practical aircraft surfaces, from subsonic general
aviation aircraft to transonic large transport aircraft, to supersonic designs.[6]

Schemes have been devised to define airfoils – an example is the NACA system. Various airfoil generation 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 can be designed for specific functions using inverse design programs such as PROFOIL, XFOIL
and AeroFoil. XFOIL is an online program created by Mark Drela that will design and analyze subsonic isolated
airfoils.[7]

Airfoil terminology
The various terms related
to airfoils are defined
below:[8]

The suction surface


(a.k.a. upper surface)
is generally associated
with higher velocity
and lower static
pressure.
The pressure surface
(a.k.a. lower surface)
has a comparatively
higher static pressure
than the suction Airfoil nomenclature
surface. The pressure
gradient between
these two surfaces contributes to the lift force generated for a given airfoil.
The geometry of the airfoil is described with a variety of terms :

The leading edge is the point at the front of the airfoil that has maximum curvature (minimum radius).[9]
The trailing edge is defined similarly as the point of maximum curvature at the rear of the airfoil.
The chord line is the straight line connecting leading and trailing edges. The chord length, or simply chord, , is
the length of the chord line. That is the reference dimension of the airfoil section.
The shape of the airfoil is defined using the following geometrical parameters:

The mean camber line or mean line is the locus of points midway between the upper and lower surfaces. Its
shape depends on the thickness distribution along the chord;
The thickness of an airfoil varies along the chord. It may be measured in either of two ways:

Thickness measured perpendicular to the camber line.[10][11] This is sometimes described as the "American
convention";[10]

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Thickness measured perpendicular to the chord line.[12] This is


sometimes described as the "British convention".

Some important parameters to describe an airfoil's shape are its camber


and its thickness. For example, an airfoil of the NACA 4-digit series such as
the NACA 2415 (to be read as 2 – 4 – 15) describes an airfoil with a camber
of 0.02 chord located at 0.40 chord, with 0.15 chord of maximum
thickness.

Finally, important concepts used to describe the airfoil's behaviour when


moving through a fluid are:
Different definitions of airfoil
The aerodynamic center, which is the chord-wise length about which
the pitching moment is independent of the lift coefficient and the angle thickness
of attack.
The center of pressure, which is the chord-wise location about which
the pitching moment is zero.

Thin airfoil theory


An airfoil designed for winglets
Thin airfoil theory is a simple theory of airfoils that relates angle of (PSU 90-125WL)
attack to lift for incompressible, inviscid flows. It was devised by German-
American mathematician Max Munk and further refined by British
aerodynamicist Hermann Glauert and others[13] in the 1920s. The theory
idealizes the flow around an airfoil as two-dimensional flow around a thin
airfoil. It can be imagined as addressing an airfoil of zero thickness and
infinite wingspan.

Thin airfoil theory was particularly notable in its day because it provided a
sound theoretical basis for the following important properties of airfoils in
two-dimensional flow:[14][15]
An airfoil section is displayed at the
1. on a symmetric airfoil, the center of pressure and aerodynamic center
are coincident and lie exactly one quarter of the chord behind the tip of this Denney Kitfox aircraft,
leading edge. built in 1991.
2. on a cambered airfoil, the aerodynamic center lies exactly one quarter
of the chord behind the leading edge.
3. the slope of the lift coefficient versus angle of attack line is units per
radian.
As a consequence of (3), the section lift coefficient of a symmetric airfoil of
infinite wingspan is:

where is the section lift coefficient,


is the angle of attack in radians, measured relative to
the chord line.

(The above expression is also applicable to a cambered airfoil where is Airfoil of Kamov Ka-26 helicopters

the angle of attack measured relative to the zero-lift line instead of the
chord line.)

Also as a consequence of (3), the section lift coefficient of a cambered airfoil of infinite wingspan is:

where is the section lift coefficient when the angle of attack is zero.

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Thin airfoil theory does not account for the stall of the airfoil, which usually occurs at an angle of attack between 10°
and 15° for typical airfoils.[16] In the mid-late 2000's, however, a theory predicting the onset of leading-edge stall was
proposed by Wallace J. Morris II in his doctoral thesis.[17] Morris's subsequent refinements contain the details on the
current state of theoretical knowledge on the leading-edge stall phenomenon.[18][19] Morris's theory predicts the
critical angle of attack for leading-edge stall onset as the condition at which a global separation zone is predicted in the
solution for the inner flow.[20] Morris's theory demonstrates that a subsonic flow about a thin airfoil can be described
in terms of an outer region, around most of the airfoil chord, and an inner region, around the nose, that asymptotically
match each other. As the flow in the outer region is dominated by classical thin airfoil theory, Morris's equations
exhibit many components of thin airfoil theory.

Derivation of thin airfoil theory


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
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


where

is the location where induced velocity is produced, is the


location of the vortex element producing the velocity and is the
chord length of the airfoil.

Since there is no flow normal to the curved surface of the airfoil,


balances that from the component of main flow , which is
From top to bottom: • Laminar flow airfoil
locally normal to the plate – the main flow is locally inclined to the
for a RC park flyer
plate by an angle . That is:
• Laminar flow airfoil for a RC pylon racer
• Laminar flow airfoil for a manned
propeller aircraft
• Laminar flow at a jet airliner airfoil
• Stable airfoil used for flying wings
This integral equation can by solved for , after replacing x by • Aft loaded airfoil allowing for a large main
spar and late stall
• Transonic supercritical airfoil
, • Supersonic leading edge airfoil
laminar flow

as a Fourier series in with a modified lead term turbulent flow


subsonic stream
supersonic flow volume
That is

(These terms are known as the Glauert integral).

The coefficients are given by


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and

By the Kutta–Joukowski theorem, the total lift force F is proportional to

and its moment M about the leading edge to

The calculated Lift coefficient depends only on the first two terms of the Fourier series, as

The moment M about the leading edge depends only on and , as

The moment about the 1/4 chord point will thus be,

From this it follows that the center of pressure is aft of the 'quarter-chord' point 0.25 c, by

The aerodynamic center, AC, is at the quarter-chord point. The AC is where the pitching moment M' does not vary
with a change in lift coefficient, i.e.,

See also
Circulation control wing
Hydrofoil
Kline–Fogleman airfoil
Küssner effect
Parafoil

Notes
1. "...the effect of the wing is to give the air stream a downward velocity component. The reaction force of the
deflected air mass must then act on the wing to give it an equal and opposite upward component." In: Halliday,
David; Resnick, Robert, Fundamentals of Physics 3rd Edition, John Wiley & Sons, p. 378

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2. "If the body is shaped, moved, or inclined in such a way as to produce a net deflection or turning of the flow, the
local velocity is changed in magnitude, direction, or both. Changing the velocity creates a net force on the body"
"Lift from Flow Turning" (http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/right2.html). NASA Glenn Research
Center. Archived (https://web.archive.org/web/20110705131653/http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/righ
t2.html) from the original on 5 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-29.
3. "The cause of the aerodynamic lifting force is the downward acceleration of air by the airfoil..." Weltner, Klaus;
Ingelman-Sundberg, Martin, Physics of Flight – reviewed (https://web.archive.org/web/20110719102847/http://use
r.uni-frankfurt.de/~weltner/Flight/PHYSIC4.htm), archived from the original (http://user.uni-frankfurt.de/~weltner/Fli
ght/PHYSIC4.htm) on 2011-07-19
4. "...if a streamline is curved, there must be a pressure gradient across the streamline..."Babinsky, Holger
(November 2003), "How do wings work?" (http://www.iop.org/EJ/article/0031-9120/38/6/001/pe3_6_001.pdf)
(PDF), Physics Education, 38 (6): 497–503, Bibcode:2003PhyEd..38..497B (http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2003P
hyEd..38..497B), doi:10.1088/0031-9120/38/6/001 (https://doi.org/10.1088%2F0031-9120%2F38%2F6%2F001)
5. Croom, C. C.; Holmes, B. J. (1985-04-01). Flight evaluation of an insect contamination protection system for
laminar flow wings (https://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19850067951).
6. Holmes, B. J.; Obara, C. J.; Yip, L. P. (1984-06-01). "Natural laminar flow experiments on modern airplane
surfaces" (https://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19840018592).
7. XFOIL (http://web.mit.edu/drela/Public/web/xfoil/)
8. Hurt, H. H., Jr. (January 1965) [1960]. Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators. U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Navy, Aviation Training Division. pp. 21–22. NAVWEPS 00-80T-80.
9. Houghton, E.L.; Carpenter, P.W. (2003). Butterworth Heinmann, ed. Aerodynamics for Engineering Students (5th
ed.). p. 18. ISBN 978-0-7506-5111-0.
10. Houghton, E. L.; Carpenter, P.W. (2003). Butterworth Heinmann, ed. Aerodynamics for Engineering Students (5th
ed.). p. 17. ISBN 978-0-7506-5111-0.
11. Phillips, Warren F. (2010). Mechanics of Flight (2nd ed.). Wiley & Sons. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-470-53975-0.
12. Bertin, John J.; Cummings, Russel M. (2009). Pearson Prentice Hall, ed. Aerodynamics for Engineers (5th ed.).
p. 199. ISBN 978-0-13-227268-1.
13. Abbott, Ira H., and Von Doenhoff, Albert E. (1959), Theory of Wing Sections, Section 4.2, Dover Publications Inc.,
New York, Standard Book Number 486-60586-8
14. Abbott, Ira H., and Von Doenhoff, Albert E. (1959), Theory of Wing Sections, Section 4.3
15. Clancy, L.J. (1975), Aerodynamics, Sections 8.1 to 8.8, Pitman Publishing Limited, London. ISBN 0-273-01120-0
16. Aerospaceweb's information on Thin Airfoil Theory (http://www.aerospaceweb.org/question/aerodynamics/q0136.
shtml)
17. Morris, Wallace J., II (2009). "A universal prediction of stall onset for airfoils at a wide range of Reynolds number
flows". Ph.D. Thesis. Bibcode:2009PhDT.......146M (http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2009PhDT.......146M).
18. Morris, Wallace J.; Rusak, Zvi (October 2013). "Stall onset on aerofoils at low to moderately high Reynolds
number flows" (https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-fluid-mechanics/article/stall-onset-on-aerofoils-
at-low-to-moderately-high-reynolds-number-flows/648F9A27BAEEBE84CF381225519749BC). Journal of Fluid
Mechanics. 733: 439–472. Bibcode:2013JFM...733..439M (http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2013JFM...733..439M).
doi:10.1017/jfm.2013.440 (https://doi.org/10.1017%2Fjfm.2013.440). ISSN 0022-1120 (https://www.worldcat.org/is
sn/0022-1120).
19. Traub, Lance W. (2016-03-24). "Semi-Empirical Prediction of Airfoil Hysteresis" (http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/
3/2/9). Aerospace. 3 (2): 9. doi:10.3390/aerospace3020009 (https://doi.org/10.3390%2Faerospace3020009).
20. Ramesh, Kiran; Gopalarathnam, Ashok; Granlund, Kenneth; Ol, Michael V.; Edwards, Jack R. (July 2014).
"Discrete-vortex method with novel shedding criterion for unsteady aerofoil flows with intermittent leading-edge
vortex shedding" (https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-fluid-mechanics/article/discretevortex-metho
d-with-novel-shedding-criterion-for-unsteady-aerofoil-flows-with-intermittent-leadingedge-vortex-shedding/22E8C
CED8CF58230DB0E3DDFA0637D72). Journal of Fluid Mechanics. 751: 500–538. Bibcode:2014JFM...751..500R
(http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2014JFM...751..500R). doi:10.1017/jfm.2014.297 (https://doi.org/10.1017%2Fjfm.
2014.297). ISSN 0022-1120 (https://www.worldcat.org/issn/0022-1120).

References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airfoil 7/8
12/22/2018 Airfoil - Wikipedia

Anderson, John, D (2007). Fundamentals of Aerodynamics. McGraw-Hill.


Desktopaero (https://web.archive.org/web/20070222145228/http://www.desktopaero.com/appliedaero/airfoils1/tat
derivation.html)
University of Sydney, Aerodynamics for Students (http://s6.aeromech.usyd.edu.au/aero/thinaero/thinaero.pdf)
Batchelor, George. K (1967). An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics. Cambridge UP. pp. 467–471.

External links
UIUC Airfoil Coordinates Database (http://www.ae.uiuc.edu/m-selig/ads/coord_database.html)
Airfoil & Hydrofoil Reference Application (http://www.skias-engineering.gr/index.php?option=com_content&task=vi
ew&id=19&Itemid=47)
FoilSim (http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/foil2.html) An airfoil simulator from NASA

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