Aerodynamic Potential-flow Code
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fluid dynamics In physics and engineering, fluid dynamics is a subdiscipline of fluid mechanics that describes the flow of fluids— liquids and gases. It has several subdisciplines, including ''aerodynamics'' (the study of air and other gases in motion) an ...
, aerodynamic potential flow codes or panel codes are used to determine the fluid velocity, and subsequently the pressure distribution, on an object. This may be a simple two-dimensional object, such as a circle or wing, or it may be a three-dimensional vehicle. A series of singularities as sources, sinks, vortex points and doublets are used to model the panels and wakes. These codes may be valid at subsonic and supersonic speeds.


History

Early panel codes were developed in the late 1960s to early 1970s. Advanced panel codes, such as Panair (developed by Boeing), were first introduced in the late 1970s, and gained popularity as computing speed increased. Over time, panel codes were replaced with higher order panel methods and subsequently CFD ( Computational Fluid Dynamics). However, panel codes are still used for preliminary aerodynamic analysis as the time required for an analysis run is significantly less due to a decreased number of elements.


Assumptions

These are the various assumptions that go into developing potential flow panel methods: *
Inviscid The viscosity of a fluid is a measure of its resistance to deformation at a given rate. For liquids, it corresponds to the informal concept of "thickness": for example, syrup has a higher viscosity than water. Viscosity quantifies the inte ...
* Incompressible \nabla \cdot V=0 * Irrotational \nabla \times V=0 * Steady \frac=0 However, the incompressible flow assumption may be removed from the potential flow derivation leaving: * Potential flow (inviscid, irrotational, steady) \nabla^2 \phi=0


Derivation of panel method solution to potential flow problem

* From Small Disturbances : (1-M_\infty^2) \phi_ + \phi_ + \phi_ = 0 (subsonic) * From
Divergence Theorem In vector calculus, the divergence theorem, also known as Gauss's theorem or Ostrogradsky's theorem, reprinted in is a theorem which relates the ''flux'' of a vector field through a closed surface to the ''divergence'' of the field in the vol ...
:\iiint\limits_V\left(\nabla\cdot\mathbf\right)dV=\iint\limits_\mathbf\cdot\mathbf\, dS * Let Velocity U be a twice continuously differentiable function in a region of volume V in space. This function is the stream function \phi . * Let P be a point in the volume V * Let S be the surface boundary of the volume V. * Let Q be a point on the surface S, and R = , P-Q, . As Q goes from inside V to the surface of V, * Therefore: :U_p= -\frac \iiint\limits_V\left(\frac\right) dV_Q : -\frac \iint\limits_S\left(\frac\right) dS_Q : +\frac \iint\limits_S\left(\mathbf\mathbf \cdot\nabla \frac\right) dS_Q For :\nabla^2 \phi=0, where the surface normal points inwards. :\phi_p = -\frac \iint\limits_S\left(\mathbf \frac - \mathbf \left( \phi_ - \phi_\right) \nabla \frac \right) dS_Q This equation can be broken down into both a source term and a doublet term. The Source Strength at an arbitrary point Q is: : \sigma = \nabla \mathbf (\nabla \phi_U-\nabla \phi_L ) The Doublet Strength at an arbitrary point Q is: : \mu =\phi_U - \phi_L The simplified potential flow equation is: :\phi_p = -\frac \iint\limits_S\left(\frac - \mu \cdot \mathbf \cdot \nabla \frac \right) dS With this equation, along with applicable boundary conditions, the potential flow problem may be solved.


Required boundary conditions

The velocity potential on the internal surface and all points inside V (or on the lower surface S) is 0. : \phi_L = 0 The Doublet Strength is: : \mu =\phi_U - \phi_L : \mu = \phi_U The velocity potential on the outer surface is normal to the surface and is equal to the freestream velocity. : \phi_U = -V_\infty \cdot \mathbf These basic equations are satisfied when the geometry is a 'watertight' geometry. If it is watertight, it is a well-posed problem. If it is not, it is an ill-posed problem.


Discretization of potential flow equation

The potential flow equation with well-posed boundary conditions applied is: :\mu_P = \frac \iint\limits_S\left(\frac \right) dS_U + \frac \iint\limits_S\left(\mu \cdot \mathbf \cdot \nabla \frac \right) dS *Note that the dS_U integration term is evaluated only on the upper surface, while th dS integral term is evaluated on the upper and lower surfaces. The continuous surface S may now be discretized into discrete panels. These panels will approximate the shape of the actual surface. This value of the various source and doublet terms may be evaluated at a convenient point (such as the centroid of the panel). Some assumed distribution of the source and doublet strengths (typically constant or linear) are used at points other than the centroid. A single source term s of unknown strength \lambda and a single doublet term m of unknown strength \lambda are defined at a given point. :\sigma_Q = \sum_^n \lambda_i s_i(Q)=0 :\mu_Q = \sum_^n \lambda_i m_i(Q) where: :s_i = ln(r) :m_i = These terms can be used to create a system of linear equations which can be solved for all the unknown values of \lambda.


Methods for discretizing panels

* constant strength - simple, large number of panels required * linear varying strength - reasonable answer, little difficulty in creating well-posed problems * quadratic varying strength - accurate, more difficult to create a well-posed problem Some techniques are commonly used to model surfaces.Section 7.6 * Body Thickness by line sources * Body Lift by line doublets * Wing Thickness by constant source panels * Wing Lift by constant pressure panels * Wing-Body Interface by constant pressure panels


Methods of determining pressure

Once the Velocity at every point is determined, the pressure can be determined by using one of the following formulas. All various Pressure coefficient methods produce results that are similar and are commonly used to identify regions where the results are invalid. Pressure Coefficient is defined as: :C_p = \frac=\frac = \frac The Isentropic Pressure Coefficient is: :C_p = \frac \left( \left(1+\frac M_\infty^2 \left frac\rightright)^ -1 \right) The Incompressible Pressure Coefficient is: :C_p = 1 - \frac The Second Order Pressure Coefficient is: :C_p = 1-, \vec, ^2 + M_\infty^2 u^2 The Slender Body Theory Pressure Coefficient is: :C_p = -(2u +v^2 +w^2) The Linear Theory Pressure Coefficient is: :C_p = -2u The Reduced Second Order Pressure Coefficient is: :C_p = 1-, \vec, ^2


What panel methods cannot do

*Panel methods are inviscid solutions. You will not capture viscous effects except via user "modeling" by changing the geometry. *Solutions are invalid as soon as the flow changes locally from subsonic to supersonic (i.e. the critical Mach number has been exceeded) or vice versa.


Potential flow software


See also

* Stream function * Conformal mapping * Velocity potential *
Divergence theorem In vector calculus, the divergence theorem, also known as Gauss's theorem or Ostrogradsky's theorem, reprinted in is a theorem which relates the ''flux'' of a vector field through a closed surface to the ''divergence'' of the field in the vol ...
*
Joukowsky transform In applied mathematics, the Joukowsky transform, named after Nikolai Zhukovsky (who published it in 1910), is a conformal map historically used to understand some principles of airfoil design. The transform is : z = \zeta + \frac, where z = x ...
* Potential flow *
Circulation Circulation may refer to: Science and technology * Atmospheric circulation, the large-scale movement of air * Circulation (physics), the path integral of the fluid velocity around a closed curve in a fluid flow field * Circulatory system, a bio ...
* Biot–Savart law


Notes

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References


Public Domain Aerodynamic Software
A Panair Distribution Source, Ralph Carmichael
Panair Volume I, Theory Manual, Version 3.0
Michael Epton, Alfred Magnus, 1990 Boeing
Panair Volume II, Theory Manual, Version 3.0
Michael Epton, Alfred Magnus, 1990 Boeing
Panair Volume III, Case Manual, Version 1.0
Michael Epton, Kenneth Sidewell, Alfred Magnus, 1981 Boeing
Panair Volume IV, Maintenance Document, Version 3.0
Michael Epton, Kenneth Sidewell, Alfred Magnus, 1991 Boeing
Recent Experience in Using Finite Element Methods For The Solution Of Problems In Aerodynamic Interference
Ralph Carmichael, 1971 NASA Ames Research Center

Fluid dynamics