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2-D Aerodynamic Forces and Moments

Fluid mechanics has always been a “visual” subject—much can be learned by viewing various aspects of fluid flow. In this new edition we have made several changes to reflect the fact that with new advances in technology, this visual component is becoming easier to incorporate into the learning environment, for both access and delivery, and is an important component to the learning of fluid mechanics. Thus, approximately 516 new photographs and illustrations have been added to the book. Some of these are within the text material; some are used to enhance the example problems; and some are included as margin figures of the type shown in the left margin to more clearly illustrate various points discussed in the text. In addition, 80 new video segments have been added, bringing the total number of video segments to 159. These video segments illustrate many interesting and practical applications of real-world fluid phenomena.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
424 views5 pages

2-D Aerodynamic Forces and Moments

Fluid mechanics has always been a “visual” subject—much can be learned by viewing various aspects of fluid flow. In this new edition we have made several changes to reflect the fact that with new advances in technology, this visual component is becoming easier to incorporate into the learning environment, for both access and delivery, and is an important component to the learning of fluid mechanics. Thus, approximately 516 new photographs and illustrations have been added to the book. Some of these are within the text material; some are used to enhance the example problems; and some are included as margin figures of the type shown in the left margin to more clearly illustrate various points discussed in the text. In addition, 80 new video segments have been added, bringing the total number of video segments to 159. These video segments illustrate many interesting and practical applications of real-world fluid phenomena.

Uploaded by

Adimasu Ayele
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Fluids Lecture 3 Notes

1. 2-D Aerodynamic Forces and Moments


2. Center of Pressure
3. Nondimensional Coefficients
Reading: Anderson 1.5 1.6

Aerodynamics Forces and Moments


Surface force distribution
The fluid flowing about a body exerts a local force/area (or stress) f~ on each point of the
body. Its normal and tangential components are the pressure p and the shear stress .

r ds

local pressure and shear stress components


( magnitude greatly exaggerated)
force/area distribution on airfoil

N
L

D
A

alternative components of resultant force

resultant force, and moment about ref. point

The figure above greatly exaggerates the magnitude of the stress component just to make
it visible. In typical aerodynamic situations, the pressure p (or even the relative pressure
p p ) is typically greater than by at least two orders of magnitude, and so f~ is very
nearly perpendicular to the surface. But the small often significantly contributes to drag,
so it cannot be neglected entirely.
~ and also
The stress distribution f~ integrated over the surface produces a resultant force R,
a moment M about some chosen moment-reference point. In 2-D cases, the sign convention
for M is positive nose up, as shown in the figure.
Force components
~ has perpendicular components along any chosen axes. These axes are
The resultant force R
arbitrary, but two particular choices are most useful in practice.
1

~ components are the drag D and the lift L, parallel and perpendicFreestream Axes: The R
~ .
ular to V
~ components are the axial force A and normal force N, parallel and
Body Axes: The R
perpendicular to the airfoil chord line.
If one set of components is computed, the other set can then be obtained by a simple axis
transformation using the angle of attack . Specifically, L and D are obtained from N and
A as follows.
L = N cos A sin
D = N sin + A cos
Force and moment calculation
A cylindrical wing section of chord c and span b has force components A and N, and moment M. In 2-D its more convenient to work with the unit-span quantities, with the span
dimension divided out.
A A/b

N N/b

M M/b

pu
pu (su )

su

dsl
V

sl
pl (sl )

u
dsu

u (su)

dsu

l (sl )

On the upper surface, the unit-span force components acting on an elemental area of width
dsu are
dNu = (pu cos u sin ) dsu
dAu = (pu sin + u cos ) dsu
And on the lower surface they are
dN = (p cos sin ) ds
dA = (p sin + cos ) ds
Integration from the leading edge to the trailing edge points produces the total unit-span
forces.
N =

TE

ZLE
TE
LE

dNu +
dAu
2

TE

Z LE
TE
LE

dN
dA

The moment about the origin (leading edge in this case) is the integral of these forces,
weighted by their moment arms x and y, with appropriate signs.

MLE =

TE

LE

dNu

TE

LE

dN

TE

LE

dAu

TE

LE

y dA

From the geometry, we have


ds cos = dx

ds sin = dy =

dy
dx
dx

which allows all the above integrals to be performed in x, using the upper and lower shapes
of the airfoil yu (x) and y (x). Anderson 1.5 has the complete expressions.
Simplifications
In practice, the shear stress has negligible contributions to the lift and moment, giving the
following simplified forms.

MLE

dy
dyu
p
(p pu ) dx + sin
= cos
dx
pu
dx
dx
0
0
!
!#
Z c"
dy
dyu
y u p x +
y dx
=
pu x +
dx
dx
0
Z

A somewhat less accurate but still common simplification is to neglect the sin term in L ,
and the dy/dx terms in M .

MLE

Z0c
0

(p pu ) dx
(p pu ) x dx

The shear stress cannot be neglected when computing the drag D on streamline bodies
such as airfoils. This is because for such bodies the integrated contributions of p toward D
tend to mostly cancel, leaving the small contribution of quite significant.

Center of Pressure
Definition
The value of the moment M depends on the choice of reference point. Using the simplified
form of the MLE integral, the moment Mref for an arbitrary reference point xref is

Mref

(p pu ) (x xref ) dx

= MLE
+ L xref

This can be positive, zero, or negative, depending on where xref is chosen, as illustrated in
the figure.
At one particular reference location xcp , called the center of pressure, the moment is defined
to be zero.

Mcp
= MLE
+ L xcp 0

xcp = MLE
/L

pl pu

L
xcp

or

or

M<0

M=0

M>0

The center of pressure asymptotes to + or as the lift tends to zero. This awkward
situation can easily occur in practice, so the center of pressure is rarely used in aerodynamics
work.
For reasons which will become apparent when airfoil theory is studied, it is advantageous
to define the standard location for the moment reference point of an airfoil to be at its
quarter-chord location, or xref = c/4. The corresponding standard moment is usually written
without any subscripts.

Mc/4

M =

(p pu ) (x c/4) dx

Aerodynamic Conventions
As implied above, the aerodynamicist has the option of picking any reference point for the
moment. The lift and the moment then represent the integrated pl pu distribution. Consider
two possible representations:
1. A resultant lift L acts at the center of pressure x = xcp . The moment about this

point is zero by definition: Mcp


= 0. The xcp location moves with angle of attack in a
complicated manner.
2. A resultant lift L acts at the fixed quarter-chord point x = c/4. The moment about

this point is in general nonzero: Mc/4


6= 0.
The figure shows how the L , M , and xcp change with angle of attack for a typical cambered
airfoil. Note that with representation 1, the xcp location moves off the airfoil and tends to
+ as L approaches zero. Fixing the moment reference point, as in representation 2, is a
simpler and preferable approach. Choosing the quarter-chord location for this is especially
attractive, since M then shows little or no dependence on the angle of attack. This surprising
fact will come from a more detailed airfoil analysis later in the course.

pl pu

=5

=0

= 5

1.

(M=0)
xcp
2.

xcp

xcp

L
M
c/4

c/4

c/4

Nondimensional Coefficients
The forces and moment depend on a large number of geometric and flow parameters. It
is often advantageous to work with nondimensionalized forces and moment, for which most
of these parameter dependencies are scaled out. For this purpose we define the following
reference parameters:
Reference area:
S
Reference length:
Dynamic pressure: q = 21 V2
The choices for S and are arbitrary, and depend on the type of body involved. For aircraft,
traditional choices are the wing area for S, and the wing chord or wing span for . The
nondimensional force and moment coefficients are then defined as follows:
L
Lift coefficient:
CL
q S
D
Drag coefficient:
CD
q S
M
Moment coefficient: CM
q S
For 2-D bodies such as airfoils, the appropriate reference area/span is simply the chord c, and
the reference length is the chord as well. The local coefficients are then defined as follows.
Local Lift coefficient:
Local Drag coefficient:
Local Moment coefficient:

L
q c
D
cd
q c
M
cm
q c2

These local coefficients are defined for each spanwise location on a wing, and may vary across
the span. In contrast, the CL , CD , CM are single numbers which apply to the whole wing.
5

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