I dont see how the relative wind is perpendicular to the rotational velocity!! isn't the angle between the cord line of the blade and the relative wind?
You have to be careful with your terminology here, because it is very easy to wind up talking about two different (yet both correct) relative winds.
So let's make it very clear which relative wind we are talking about. Realize that there will be a relative wind that is associated with the entire airplane, and that is the relative wind that is seen by the wing. (Actually, there are some small effects that change that relative wind slightly around the wings, but it's close enough for government work to think of them as the same). Basically, this relative wind is what we are normally talking about when we use the term. In the picture that Tgrayson posted, that's the V that is at the bottom of the triangle. I can't quite read the label he put on there on my computer, but it looks like Vs or maybe V with an infinity sign on it. That's the relative wind of the AIRPLANE as a whole. And of course the angle between the chord line of the wing and the relative wind of the AIRPLANE is the airplane's angle of attack.
But remember that the propeller blade is basically just a little tiny wing. It has a chord line and a motion to it, and therefore it has a relative wind and an angle of attack all it's own as well. The propeller has motion from two sources. First the whole AIRPLANE is moving forward, and second the blades of the propeller are spinning. In the picture Tgrayson drew, the motion from the blades spinning is Vrot. Of course the motion from the whole airplane moving forward in space is the same Vs or V infinity. (I wish I could read that symbol

).
If you put those two together you get the relative wind that the propeller sees, which is different than the relative wind seen by the whole airplane. Tgrayson labelled the relative wind as seen by the propeller as Vres, which probably stands for "resultant", which is what you call it when you add two vectors (or two arrows) together. I'll follow his lead and call the relative wind for the whole AIRPLANE, Vs, I'll call the relative wind for the propeller, Vres (for resultant), and I'll call the motion of the air around the propeller that is due to JUST the rotation, Vrot.
So on to the answer to your question. Why is the relative wind of the AIRPLANE perpindicular to the Vrot (at zero angle of attack)? Well, from the discussion above hopefully you can already see why. Assume for sake of argument a zero angle of attack for the AIRPLANE. The AIRPLANE is travelling straight forward (along it's longitudinal axis), and the propeller is travelling in a circle that is perpindicular to that direction.
Now what happens when you increase angle of attack (OF THE AIRPLANE)? Well, that circle that the propeller is spinning in gets tilted. Specifically the bottom of the circle (the prop arc, as it's usually called) moves forward and the top moves back. So some of the relative wind OF THE AIRPLANE, Vs, is now moving along the same direction as Vrot, which causes the length of Vres to get bigger. In other words the speed of the relative wind of the PROPELLER (Vres) goes up on the descending blade, which causes the descending blade to produce more "lift".
Of course "lift" on the propeller blade is really just THRUST. So that effect produces more thrust on the descending propeller blade.
The other effect is this: Because the Vs and the Vrot are more aligned (still talking about just the descending blade, now), Vs doesn't cause the angle between Vrot and Vres to be as big. If that angle shrinks (the angle between Vres and Vrot) than the angle between Vres and the chord of the propeller must grow, since the chord of the propeller and the direction of rotation are FIXED. If you are having trouble seeing this, imagine the airplane at 90 degrees of angle of attack. In that case, the Vs and the Vrot would be perfectly aligned, so adding them together, Vres would also be perfectly aligned. Which would mean that the angle between the chord of the propeller and Vres would have become the same as the angle between the chord of the propeller and Vrot.
But the angle between the chord of the propeller and the Vres is the angle of attack of the PROPELLER blade! Since that angle grew, it also means that the "lift" of the descending blade would increase due to that effect as well!
So BOTH effects produce more "lift" on the descending propeller blade (or, really it's more THRUST).
VDEE7 said:
Do you have one for the ascending blade?
The ascending blade is going to behave the exact opposite. If you get comfortable with and understand the descending blade, you won't have any trouble understanding the ascending blade, either.
So, back to the big picture: When we fly at a positive angle of attack (OF THE AIRPLANE) we get more thrust out of the descending blade and less thrust out of the ascending blade. If your propeller spins clockwise, as seen by the pilot, that means more thrust from the right side of the prop arc, and less from the left side. Hence, you get a yaw to the left, and you need to add right rudder due to that effect.
Not to mention needing to add right rudder due to spiraling prop wash, gyroscopic effect, and torque, which are the other 3 effects that contribute to the yaw in a propeller aircraft.