The Coanda Effect: Exploring Airflow Over an Airfoil

In summary, the Coanda effect is a phenomenon observed in fluid dynamics where the flow of a fluid stays attached to a curved surface rather than separating from it. This is due to the vacuum created by the flow pulling the air down against the surface, and it is a function of the velocity of the fluid stream and the radius of curvature of the surface. The Kutta condition, which explains the position of the rear stagnation point on an airfoil, also plays a role in the Coanda effect, as it causes the flow over the top of the airfoil to be much faster than the flow below. While there is no mathematical derivation for the Coanda effect, it has been observed and studied in various scenarios, including in aeronautics
  • #1
perfectz
60
0
What makes the air, flow much faster on top of the airfoil, when compared with the bottom surface? In engineering terms, why is there a relatively higher rate of change in velocity over the top surface?
and is there any mathematical derivation/proof for coanda effect?
 
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  • #2
is my question so stupid that no one can answer?
 
  • #3
You asked on a weekday morning...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coanda_effect

The simplest part of the explanation is that if the flow didn't stay connected to the airfoil, there would be a vacuum, so it is that vacuum that pulls the air down against the airfoil.
 
  • #4
dude russ,
I personally feel that coada effect is a function of the velocity of the fluid stream,(in other words rate of shear) and the radius of curvature of the cylinder, spoon, airfoil.
And I am sure that there is much more to the story. Wikipedia doesn't give any mathematical/physical derivation, but explains the physical aspect of it.
So I need some heavy derivations. Is it patented?:confused:
 
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  • #5
I believe the velocity difference is caused by the Kutta condition:

For an airfoil with positive angle of attack, the downstream stagnation point will be on top of the airfoil. This is impossible to maintain in a viscous fluid because there would be an infinite change in velocity around the trailing edge of the airfoil. The stagnation point moves to the trailing edge via an induced circulation about the airfoil.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kutta_condition
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circulation_(fluid_dynamics)

theres links to info about the kutta condition and circulation


ive only had one fluid mechanics class so correct me if I am wrong on some of these things
 
  • #7
so there's no mathematical/scientific derivation for coanda effect?
 
  • #8
Does the Kutta condition ever apply to propellers?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kutta_condition
The Kutta condition is a principle in fluid dynamics, especially aerodynamics, applied at sharp corners such as trailing edges of airfoils in steady flow. It allows an aerodynamicist to incorporate a significant effect of viscosity while neglecting viscous effects in the underlying conservation of momentum equation. It is important in the practical calculation of lift on a wing.

Besides wing stall, what might be another example of "unsteady flow"?
 
  • #9
The upper surface of the aerofoil must be viewed as half-venturi-tube. thus, the point where maximum thickness of aerofoil exists, it behaves as the throat of a venturi tube. here, Velocity is max and pressure is min. When flow comes out of throat and flows towards the trailing edge, where the venturi opens up, velocity decreases and pressure increases.
So, the answer to your question is, the chamber of the aerofoil makes it behave like a venturi, resulting in variation of velocity and pressure. Lower surface of an aerofoil are generally flat.
 
  • #11
The guy farther up talking about the Kutta condition was on the right track. Kutta explains why the air above moves faster.
 
  • #12
Kutta condition just explains CIRCULATION. It expalins the position of the rear stagnation point, it does not explain the velocity profile of air on an erofoil. Kutta also expalins the reason for starting vortices. To the best of my knowledge, it no where comes close to explain velocity profile
 
  • #13
Kutta explains why the air up top is accelerated. Without that, conservation laws wouldn't be satisfied. The upper surface is NOT a half-Venturi tube and there is no such thing as "equal transit time", another common explanation for why the flow on top is accelerated.

Potential flow theory would show that at positive angle of attack, the rear stagnation point would be on top of the airfoil and that the air on the bottom would bend around the trailing edge and meat the top air at that stagnation point. On an airfoil, which has a sharp trailing edge, that would require an infinite velocity while turning around that edge. In a real, viscous fluid, this is impossible. The viscosity of the fluid essentially forces that rear stagnation point to be located at the trailing edge, meaning the top flow is much faster than the bottom flow in order to satisfy continuity.

That is the real cause of the flow over the top of the foil being so much faster than below. The higher speeds means that the airfoil has a net circulation when at steady-state, and that circulation can translate into lift through the Kutta-Jukowski theorem. You could also just take the actual velocity profile and do Bernoulli on it.

The important thing is that the Kutta condition is exactly what explains the accelerated flow over the top of the airfoil. Of course, I would love to hear your competing argument for why it doesn't explain the phenomenon.
 
  • #14
Kutta condition states that the circulation over an aerofoil is such that the rear stagnation point is at trailing edge. Movement of stagnation point from above the aerofoil surface to the trailing edge is accompanied by STARTING VORTEX. This no way explains why air should move faster to relocate the rear stagnation point.

Ok, as per BONEH3AD statement, once the stagnation point is relocated at trailing edge, the job is done, and air should stop accelerating. But this is not the actual case. Kutta condition just explains circulation and starting vortices. This no where explains why air flows faster on upper surface.
 
  • #15
You are seriously going to argue this? I do aerodynamics for a living.

You still haven't explained adequately how I am wrong. That, of course, is because I am not wrong.
 
  • #16
boneh3ad said:
You are seriously going to argue this? I do aerodynamics for a living.

I don't know if you're right or not, but this kind of appeal to authority just doesn't cut it here. Nobody is really interested in what you do for a living.
 
  • #17
I suppose I probably could have taken a different route, but this guy has no point. He is stating the Kutta condition as it is applied in potential flow theory. However, there is a physical basis for that application, and that is the driving factor for why the air on top moves more quickly. It must. Physics forces the location of the stagnation point to be on the trailing edge and conservation laws force the flow on top to move faster. That IS the explanation.
 
  • #18
gmax137 said:
I don't know if you're right or not, but this kind of appeal to authority just doesn't cut it here. Nobody is really interested in what you do for a living.

It gets my attention.
 
  • #19
The Coanda effect has to do with the viscosity of air and what happens when the air shears in the boundary layer. (See Gersten and Schlichting: "Boundary Layer Theory.") The mathematical problem is that the "fluid approximation," which is basis of fluid dynamics, is not valid. See this paper (mine :smile:):

http://arxiv.org/abs/nlin/0507032
 
  • #20
ekrim said:
I believe the velocity difference is caused by the Kutta condition:

For an airfoil with positive angle of attack, the downstream stagnation point will be on top of the airfoil. This is impossible to maintain in a viscous fluid because there would be an infinite change in velocity around the trailing edge of the airfoil. The stagnation point moves to the trailing edge via an induced circulation about the airfoil.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kutta_condition
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circulation_(fluid_dynamics)

theres links to info about the kutta condition and circulation


ive only had one fluid mechanics class so correct me if I am wrong on some of these things
You're confusing cause and effect. The Kutta condition is an effect. The phenomenon is air molecules flowing by and interacting with the molecular structure of an airfoil.

http://arxiv.org/abs/nlin/0507032
 
  • #21
Basic flow comes from displacement. For field integrity there must be an aft mass flow equal to the forward displacement. In an ideal flow there would be equal flow above and below for no lift. With Kutta in real flow, circulation moves the forward stagnation streamline down equivilent to the aft. More (most) of the displaced air is diverted over the top, with increased velocity.
 
  • #22
ccrummer said:
You're confusing cause and effect. The Kutta condition is an effect. The phenomenon is air molecules flowing by and interacting with the molecular structure of an airfoil.

http://arxiv.org/abs/nlin/0507032

It's been a while so forgive me if there are inconsistencies in this but I believe ccrummer is correct. Kutta is based on circulation and if I remember correctly, circulation originates from viscous effects and boundary conditions on the airfoil. This being the case, the flow must bend to create a transition region of some sort behind the camber causing a low pressure region speeding up the original flow.
 
  • #23
Gents you have my attention. Reading arxiv.org. It will take some time to ratioalize it with "fluid approximation".
 
  • #24
Sorry that i am re-entering this zone after a long time.
Firstly, kutta condition is not a cause for air flowing at a greater speed over the airfoil. It is an effect of it.
The cause comes from the fact that airfoil in air, behaves like half venturi tube, which can explain all the features of the airfoil.
It can explain why air flow is faster on the upper surface
It can explain the development of adverse pressure gradient
This assumption can also help in explaining the airfoil behaviour in supersonic flow as well
I don't know how to add figures in this space, to explain.
This assumption of half venturi tube can explain everything of airfoil, without any trace of doubts.
I knw some people are not in agreement of the term HALF VENTURI TUBE, i am ready for criticism.
 
  • #25
Remember a super critical airfoil have flattend upper surface and curved aft surface. This is because, a supersonic flow accelerates in divergent zone and decelerates in convg zone of CONVG-DIVG nozzle.
 
  • #26
danny2010 said:
Sorry that i am re-entering this zone after a long time.
Firstly, kutta condition is not a cause for air flowing at a greater speed over the airfoil. It is an effect of it.

No. Viscosity is what ensures the fluid cannot travel around the sharp trailing edge, enforcing the condition that the rear stagnation point must be on that trailing edge. That is what is termed the Kutta condition. To satisfy the conservation laws while still keeping that stagnation point, the upper air must move faster.

danny2010 said:
The cause comes from the fact that airfoil in air, behaves like half venturi tube, which can explain all the features of the airfoil.

No it isn't. That cannot be applied here given the fact that a Venturi tube is a control volume, this is not. The similarity is purely a coincidence, not physically meaningful.

danny2010 said:
It can explain why air flow is faster on the upper surface
It can explain the development of adverse pressure gradient
This assumption can also help in explaining the airfoil behaviour in supersonic flow as well
I don't know how to add figures in this space, to explain.
This assumption of half venturi tube can explain everything of airfoil, without any trace of doubts.
I knw some people are not in agreement of the term HALF VENTURI TUBE, i am ready for criticism.

It can if invoked incorrectly. Magic could explain it too, but that doesn't make it correct.

danny2010 said:
Remember a super critical airfoil have flattend upper surface and curved aft surface. This is because, a supersonic flow accelerates in divergent zone and decelerates in convg zone of CONVG-DIVG nozzle.

Actually supersonic airfoils work by taking advantage of shocks on the bottom half to raise the pressure by decelerating the flow and Prandtl-Meyer expansion waves on the upper half to accelerate the flow, leading to the same sort of circulation as dictated by the Kutta condition on a subsonic nozzle.
 
  • #27
The cause comes from the fact that airfoil in air, behaves like half venturi tube, which can explain all the features of the airfoil.

This is not an explanation. You're saying that the half-Venturi tube explains everything about the airfoil just because they behave the same way. You can't say that the Kutta condition doesn't explain it because it just happens as an effect AND that the half-Venturi tube explains it because some effects are the same. This is a contradiction in your requirements of proof.

According to this website (http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/k-12/airplane/wrong3.html" ), the half-Venturi tube explanation of lift is a wrong theory. You might not like boneh3ad's explanation, but it seems that a few people at NASA agree. It seems they happen also to do aerodynamics for a living, but I know that doesn't mean that much to some. As for me, I tend to respect people who get paid regularly for their knowledge of a certain topic.
 
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1. What is the Coanda Effect?

The Coanda Effect is a scientific principle that describes the tendency of a fluid, such as air, to adhere to a curved surface and follow its shape, rather than continue in a straight line.

2. How does the Coanda Effect apply to airflow over an airfoil?

When air flows over an airfoil, such as a wing, the curved shape of the airfoil causes the air to adhere to its surface and follow its path. This creates a difference in pressure between the upper and lower surfaces of the airfoil, resulting in lift.

3. What factors affect the strength of the Coanda Effect?

The strength of the Coanda Effect is influenced by several factors, including the shape and curvature of the surface, the speed and viscosity of the fluid, and the angle of attack of the airfoil.

4. How is the Coanda Effect used in practical applications?

The Coanda Effect has been used in various engineering and industrial applications, such as in aircraft design, to improve lift and maneuverability, and in fluid pumps to improve efficiency and reduce noise.

5. Are there any limitations or drawbacks to the Coanda Effect?

While the Coanda Effect has many practical applications, it also has limitations and drawbacks. For example, it can be difficult to predict and control, and in some cases, it can cause unwanted turbulence and drag.

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