munudeges wrote:I don't like all of these descriptions of it 'energising' the airflow because it tells you nothing.
If you stand in a hot bathroom with the door closed and the room next door is full of cooler air you will feel a rush of cooler air coming under the gap in the door. That's the effect that's being created at the back of the car. However, the trick is keeping the effect going when the cooler air has displaced the hotter exhaust gas so it doesn't go hot and cold, so to speak, and to maintain the integrity of that gas flow in another moving flow.
Red Bull cleverly realised that to draw cooler air through the diffuser at a greater rate and get a greater effect they had to get their exhaust gas around to the rear and more importantly the sides of the diffuser.
munudeges,
"energizing" the air is of great importance. Extracting work from an airflow first requires that the airflow has some work (or energy) to contribute. The diffuser on an F1 car has a finite length, and where that diffuser flow surface abruptly ends there will be flow separation, turbulence, and drag. The reason there is flow separation is that the upper and lower diffuser surface trailing flows are at different local dynamic pressures. This basic condition is what makes the diffuser create underbody downforce. And air being air, the diffuser trailing flow naturally migrates from a region of high pressure (the upper flow) to one of lower pressure (the diffuser flow). Of course, this tumbling, turbulent trailing airflow also reduces the diffuser effectiveness.
The "hot blown" concept improves diffuser function by "energizing", or imparting momentum to, the upper surface diffuser air flow. In essence, hot blowing the upper diffuser airflow mass imparts momentum to it, which increases its velocity. And the increased velocity of this airflow as it passes over the trailing edge of the diffuser creates a relative dynamic pressure gradient that minimizes turbulence and underbody flow separation.
Of course, take my explanation for what it's worth. I'm a mechanical engineer, not an aero engineer.
riff_raff