Aerodynamic Investigation on Performance Enhancement of NACA 2412 Airfoil with Suction Assistance

Advanced transport aircraft concept has active boundary-layer control by slot suction which reduces drag by stabilizing the laminar boundary. Thus, the prevention of transition and delaying the boundary layer separation will lead to a higher lift co-efficient. The influence of location and position...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of vehicle structures and systems Vol. 12; no. 1; pp. 74 - 78
Main Authors Venkatesh, S., Vimal, S. Rakesh, Manigandan, S., Gunasekar, P.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Chennai MechAero Foundation for Technical Research & Education Excellence 2020
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Summary:Advanced transport aircraft concept has active boundary-layer control by slot suction which reduces drag by stabilizing the laminar boundary. Thus, the prevention of transition and delaying the boundary layer separation will lead to a higher lift co-efficient. The influence of location and position of suction, suction flow rate and suction hole width on aerodynamic performance have greater influence. These examine the potential payoff for boundary-layer control as applied to the advanced-concept wings. An experimental work deals with the continuous normal suction from the wing upper surface effects on the aerodynamic forces. The wing model with NACA-2412 has been made to achieve normal suction from the wing upper surface by means of four slot channels. The results showed that the continuous normal suction can significantly increase the lift to drag force ratio and this ratio is increasing as the strength of suction increases. There is a convincing decrease in drag and pressure loss and an increase in max lift, which in turn improves the overall performance of the aircraft. While multi-hole suction control can reduce drag much more efficiently than single hole suction control, the position of the suction hole has a greater effect on reducing pressure losses than the suction flow rate.
ISSN:0975-3060
0975-3540
DOI:10.4273/ijvss.12.1.16