Boundary Layer, Parasitic and Induced Drag: Fundamentals of Flight NDAE-Feb06 Khaled N. Al Masri
Boundary Layer, Parasitic and Induced Drag: Fundamentals of Flight NDAE-Feb06 Khaled N. Al Masri
Boundary Layer, Parasitic and Induced Drag: Fundamentals of Flight NDAE-Feb06 Khaled N. Al Masri
THIS IS DRAG!
3. Interference Drag
SKIN FRICTION DRAG
• Imagine a stream of air as a large
number of molecules passing over a flat
plate at a velocity V.
Skin Friction Drag
• The particles of air separate at the
leading edge and flow over the upper
surface and under the lower surface,
reuniting at the trailing edge.
• The resistance of skin friction is caused
by a tendency of the particles to cling to
the surface of the aircraft skin.
• There are two reasons for that
tendency:
– Skin has a certain amount of roughness. It
is impossible to make it perfectly smooth.
– Air has viscosity (resistance offered by a
fluid to the relative motion of its particles).
Think of the difference between water and
honey!
Boundary Layer
• This gives a rise to a phenomenon
known as:
Boundary Layer
Boundary Layer
• Laminar Flow describes the situation
when air is flowing in thin sheets, or
layers close to the surface of a wing
with NO DISTURBANCE between the
layers (no cross flow of air particles
from one layer to another).
Boundary Layer and Laminar
Flow
• Laminar Flow is most likely to occur
where the surface is extremely smooth
and especially near the wing’s leading
edge.
• Under these conditions the boundary
layer will be very thin.
Boundary Layer
• Boundary Layer is that layer of air
adjacent to the airfoil surface.