tgrayson
New Member
The sharp trailing edge introduces the left to right circulation into the airflow.
What is your understanding of how the trailing edge induces circulation? (I can't tell that you explicitly said in your post.)
The sharp trailing edge introduces the left to right circulation into the airflow.
Carpenter just states that placing a sharp edge at the aft stagnation point produces the rotational flow...with accompanying illustrations showing the streamlines.
It sure seems that they are both saying the same thing to me. As I read the passages from Anderson...I don't see any appreciable differences from what Carpenter is saying. He actually, reinforces what I learned from Carpenter.
Back to Coanda....do you feel this is any part of that effect?
Carpenter also says that the flow separates from the bottom going to the top, so they both agree on this. Separation happens before circulation.
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The flow cannot separate from the top, because it is the bottom flow that is trying to move around the trailing edge, and it will continue to do so until the separation causes the quantity of circulation to be such that the rear stagnation point reaches the trailing edge. The top flow never reaches the trailing edge until the Kutta Condition is satisfied.
Associated with illustration 7.10, Carpenter states that separation occurs cleanly at the trailing edge.
Once the airflow begins...the stagnation point changes to the trailing edge where separation occurs. Do I have this wrong?
Also...your point about the vortex causing circulation...not the trailing edge. Wouldn't this be like a wake? A wake doesn't "drag" the airplane down. The adverse pressure forces on the wing drag the airplane down. The wake is an effect of the cause.
I'm confused on this, then. The circulatory flow is clockwise.
[This is a difficult discussion to have online; I need books and whiteboards.Coming to Memphis anytime soon?]
I should pick up Anderson's text and read it.
there really isn't anything left that needs to be said!
Alright just so I have this clear, doesn't the Coanda Effect say a fluid will follow a convex surface?.
So not really critical to the development of lift, but just charactertistic of fluids in general
The coanda effect can be described as the balance between the inertial and normal pressure gradient forces in a near-surface jet of a fluid. A simple case used to describe this phenomenon is a two-dimensional wall jet, which entrains the surrounding fluid. As the boundary layer is entrained, the local pressure in the boundary layer is reduced, creating a pressure gradient that pulls or entrains the jet towards the surface. From the conservation of momentum, as fluid is entrained, the jet velocity is reduced. Eventually, the jet velocity is low enough that the fluid viscosity creates an adverse pressure gradient, again separating the flow. Expanding this concept to a convexly curved surface, a pressure gradient is created, forcing the jet to bend around the surface, until the adverse pressure gradient is reached.
I spent some more time at the library today looking through Schlichting's "Boundary Layer Theory" which appears to be a classic reference on the subject.
I spent some more time at the library today looking through Schlichting's "Boundary Layer Theory" which appears to be a classic reference on the subject. Once again, it did not have any specific reference to Coanda effect. I then found a book that was a collection of papers on circulation and boundary layer control, which did have a few references to the effect. I also did a search of an online aerospace paper database. In all cases these papers were regarding jets of air being blown near the leading edge or trailing edge to achieve various performance goals.