An article from Willem Toet, Motorsport, F1 and Aerodynamics Specialist, ex Sauber:
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/air-duct ... illem-toet
Can someone expand on this? I'm visualising a spike inside the duct to lower the expansion rate but don't know this really beneficial compared to a larger inlet and less expansion. Is it purely because the area inlet of the front of the car was already at a maximum size?We went to a pretty aggressive angle, of something like 15 degrees, in one plane only which was never going to stay attached but we added two splitters to control the expansion in each part of the duct to about 5 degrees
I believe you are way over complicating the workings of the expansion chamber. It is much simpler than that. As the airflow explains in the chamber it will slowdown. This slowing of air increases the static pressure in e chamber and therefore forces more airflow into the brake ducts, driver cooling ducts.godlameroso wrote:In simple terms, the expander creates a tendency for vorticity, especially when heat is added. Curious thing about air, no one bothers to account for it's kinematic viscosity, sure it's increase is minimal, and yet, a little can go a long way. Afterall a 747 only has to have the pressure drop under it's wings a relatively minimal amount to lift that heavy thing up in the air.
Anyway back to why an expander causes vorticity, the kinematic viscosity of air rises as it's heated, http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/air-a ... d_601.html.
What this means is that hot air tends to 'pull' the air around it in the same direction. Now when air moves, it's obvious that it goes from some place to another, but since our atmosphere is pressurized, when you move air, that same space is not going to become a vacuum forever, it gets filled with more air, and if you move it fast enough you'll get a temporary vacuum in a measurable volume. If this is true, then heating this air and increasing it's kinematic viscosity will not only allow you to move the air faster, because it is less dense, but it will also pull more air creating a greater vacuum for a specified volume. Add in an expander and you can create an even greater vacuum as long as your flow remains energized 'ie laminar'. And what happens when the pressure drops enough in relation to energy/speed? Vortecies, just like when you drain the tub.
Is laminar flow really that important of a condition? If the air doesn't detach from the walls from the expanding duct and there is no back flow then I don't think it really matters from a cooling perspective that the flow is laminar. Empirical testing has shown that the convection coefficient is higher for turbulent air over a flat plate compared to laminar (and I believe this extends to tube geometry as well), so your cooling performance will be higher with turbulent flow.godlameroso wrote: What this means is that hot air tends to 'pull' the air around it in the same direction. Now when air moves, it's obvious that it goes from some place to another, but since our atmosphere is pressurized, when you move air, that same space is not going to become a vacuum forever, it gets filled with more air, and if you move it fast enough you'll get a temporary vacuum in a measurable volume. If this is true, then heating this air and increasing it's kinematic viscosity will not only allow you to move the air faster, because it is less dense, but it will also pull more air creating a greater vacuum for a specified volume. Add in an expander and you can create an even greater vacuum as long as your flow remains energized 'ie laminar'. And what happens when the pressure drops enough in relation to energy/speed? Vortecies, just like when you drain the tub.
I guess laminar flow is a bad way to put it, I didn't want to say directional vector because air doesn't really move like that either. I guess we could say the general direction of airflow should try to encompass the whole volume in question, and that by far is the hardest thing to do.Cold Fussion wrote: Is laminar flow really that important of a condition? If the air doesn't detach from the walls from the expanding duct and there is no back flow then I don't think it really matters from a cooling perspective that the flow is laminar. Empirical testing has shown that the convection coefficient is higher for turbulent air over a flat plate compared to laminar (and I believe this extends to tube geometry as well), so your cooling performance will be higher with turbulent flow.
Right, as Toet’s reference to tripping the flow would indicate.Tommy Cookers wrote:most laminar flow has to a greater or lesser extent a turbulent boundary layer