DFS takes CFD out of the conundrum of finding turbulence and wall models, which despite efforts over more than 100 years has not led to true predictive capability. Standard CFD is typically fitted to match observation but does not deliver correct prediction without prior (wind tunnel) observation and so is not very useful for design.
DFS combines the Euler equations in the fluid domain with a slip boundary condition on the smooth wall of the body modeling vanishing viscous skin friction. DFS shows to correctly predict drag as form/pressure drag within experimental precision and thus shows that the contribution from skin friction is negligible. This is in direct contradiction to standard CFD which attributes 50\% or more of drag to skin friction for slender bodies.
As an example we consider the case of drag and lift coefficients C_D and C_L for the basic test case of a long Naca0012 wing, as function of angle of attack \alpha. DFS delivers the following results for 0\le \alpha\le 15 well below stall:
- C_L(\alpha ) \approx = 0.1\times\alpha,
- C_D(\alpha ) \approx = 0.004 + 0.001\times\alpha.
This fits wind tunnel experiments (without artificial tripping) by Ladson within experimental precision.
The Ladson value C_D=0.005 for \alpha =0 instead of 0.004 with DFS, stands out as a limit case for which extrapolation from \alpha\ge 2 as in DFS may well be more relevant than direct measurement with tripping as an issue (C_D=0.008 with tripping).
We see a linear variation of both C_L and C_D with the angle of attack \alpha as an expected effect of changing geometry. For lift it connects to effective downwash scaling with \alpha and for drag with an effective frontal area also scaling with \alpha
The efficiency of the wing is measured by the lift L to drag D quotient \frac{L}{D}=\frac{C_L}{C_D} ranging from 33 for \alpha =2 over 60 for \alpha =6 to 75 for \alpha =15, thus with steadily increasing \frac{L}{D} before stall.
The common view is that for a short wing C_D has a contribution scaling with C_L^2 thus quadratically in \alpha due to a wing tip effect, which suggests that for a long wing C_D is constant as being dominated by skin friction, however without support in observation.
Summary:
- DFS shows that for slightly viscous flow beyond the drag crisis for Reynolds number around 500.000, total drag is mainly form/pressure drag with a very small (at most 10\%) contribution from skin friction.
- Standard CFD attributes instead 50\% or more to skin friction for an airplane or ship.
The dogma of 50\% skin friction is upheld by tripped experiments where e.g. a ribbon is fastened on the body transversal to the flow to generate turbulence increasing drag which is then attributed to skin friction, while it effectively instead corresponds to a change of form. This way observation is fitted to theory prescribing massive skin friction, while in correct science theory is fitted to observation.
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