Andres125sx wrote:So if DF (x) is a product of potential energy (y) and the use the car can make of it (z), if you cannot stop that decrease in (y), you still can increase (z) to compensate
Basically this is the reason I think active aero could be used to, at least, reduce the problem. The difficult part obviously is figuring out out to increase aero only when in a slipstream efficiently
That's not how it works.
A wing's camber, angle of attack, and constituent elements are largely a reflection of the prevailing conditions the wing is expected to encounter. Since F1 cars spend more time in clean air than in traffic, and clean-air configurations offer the highest possible performance potential, wings are designed accordingly. The problem is that conditions inherent to wake turbulence can't sustain the aggressive wing settings that are possible in clean air.
In broad, (very) simplified terms, what keeps air flow attached to an aerodynamic surface is potential energy. The more potential energy contained within a packet of air, the more that packet of air can be productively manipulated before it detaches. Because total energy is constant, or
conserved, the increased kinetic energy of a turbulent wake means it has less potential energy to keep packets of air attached to a wing element. To wit, the efficiency of a wing is reduced when passing through turbulence, because air flow detaches earlier than it would in clean air.
Increasing AoA would only make the problem worse, like the pilot of a stalled aircraft who pulls back on the stick instead of pitching the nose down. For F1, the corrective action would be to reduce AoA. However, that won't increase downforce, and it's not likely to prevent further losses, because precious little about wake turbulence is consistent. By definition, it's unsteady.
It's possible that deploying flaps to make the front wing larger could help mitigate the problem. But, deploying flaps would
definitely have a negative impact on elements downstream.
Again, it's a lot easier to reduce downforce with active aero than it is to increase it.
Random thoughts on a wing equipped with fans...
1. The outer extremities of a car are the worst possible places to add weight.
2. Not that I'd really care, unrestricted fans could potentially become a performance differentiator such that overtaking would be affected by aero the same way it is now, except in reverse. If the idea is less aero, that outcome would make it all pointless. (And the result would still be subject to negation by convergence.)
3. Aero balance can be managed passively. In fact, it is.
The adverse impact of wake turbulence is diminished as you move from the front of the car toward the back. That means front-biased low-pressure zones (pictured above) should theoretically be no worse than evened out by turbulence. In practice, ordinary development makes it a moot point.
mrluke wrote:What is the evidence to show that the "wake" or a loss of downforce is the reason for difficulty in overtaking?
None exists. It's all anecdotal.