Something didn’t feel right about what was said in the media and on forums about the F1 diffuser technology. So I spelled out the following for myself, in an attempt to understand what’s going on. Check me out on this. But please no Techno-Babble. [-o<
A diffuser converts flow from high speed at low static pressure (pin) to low speed at high static pressure (pout).
Cut in half, we have the diffuser under a race car.
The flow at the outlet is at atmospheric pressure, therefore pin must be lower.
But, the FIA regulations dictate a flat floor, parallel to the ground with no protrusions, allowing no venturi effect to be created under the car. So, even under ideal conditions the static pressure under the car cannot be lower than atmospheric. Forcing exhaust gas under the floor of the car would actually lift it.
Some tricks can be played with the shape of side pods to create local low pressure regions at the edge of the floor,
or even an airfoil shaped interface between the reference and step planes.
However, none of these would reduce the inlet pressure to the diffuser to an extent that justifies the steep upper surfaces of current diffusers.
Actually, I believe, the true benefit of the diffuser is offered by its outside surface, that imparts upward momentum to the back flow from the bodywork. And there’s a lot of that back flow, which was previously just dumped into the wake.
What to do with the turbulent mess at ambient wake pressure inside the diffuser? Attempts have been made to clean it up by ducting available side flow into it. Adrian Newey must have been on vacation when Red Bull apparently tried exhaust jet-induction to increase flow through the diffuser. Of course, none of this can be “diffused”, as it all enters at atmospheric pressure. It only adds skin friction drag inside the diffuser, made worse by multiple guide fins.
I think I now understand why people are going to front exhausts. In the rear, exhaust exits as a pulsing hot jet, wasting all of its energy. If released in front, properly deflected, its energy could be made to mix exhaust with free stream in such a manner as to create a vortex that captures extra air and directs it onto the top surface of the diffuser, where it can be deflected upward to create extra down force. Not an easy task, with varying speed and throttle. (Hopefully, it won’t hit the face of the rear tire.)
Is Adrian Newey back from vacation?