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Flow Physics of a Race Car Wing With Vortex Generators in Ground Effect
This paper experimentally investigates the use of vortex generators for separation control on an inverted wing in ground effect using off-surface flow measurements and surface flow visualization. A ty...

Flow Separation Control on a Race Car Wing With Vortex Generators in Ground Effect

J. Fluids Eng.  -- December 2009 --  Volume 131,  Issue 12, 121102 (8 pages)
doi:10.1115/1.4000420

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Author(s):
Yuichi Kuya, Kenji Takeda, Senior Lecturer; Xin Zhang, Professor; Scott Beeton, and Ted Pandaleon
School of Engineering Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK
Flow separation control using vortex generators on an inverted wing in ground effect is experimentally investigated, and its performance is characterized in terms of forces and pressure distributions over a range of incidence and ride height. Counter-rotating and co-rotating rectangular-vane type vortex generators are tested on the suction surface of the wing. The effect of device height and spacing is investigated. The counter-rotating sub-boundary layer vortex generators and counter-rotating large-scale vortex generators on the wing deliver 23% and 10% improvements in the maximum downforce, respectively, compared with the clean wing, at an incidence of one degree, and delay the onset of the downforce reduction phenomenon. The counter-rotating sub-boundary layer vortex generators exhibit up to 26% improvement in downforce and 10% improvement in aerodynamic efficiency at low ride heights. Chordwise pressure measurement confirms that both counter-rotating vortex generator configurations suppress flow separation, while the co-rotating vortex generators exhibit negligible effectiveness. This work shows that a use of vortex generators, notably of the counter-rotating sub-boundary layer vortex generator type, can be effective at controlling flow separation, with a resultant improvement in downforce for relatively low drag penalty.

©2009 American Society of Mechanical Engineers

History: Received 20 March 2009; revised 1 October 2009; published 19 November 2009
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/1.4000420

KEYWORDS and PACS

Keywords
PACS
  • 47.32.Ff
    Separated flows
  • 47.20.Ib
    Instability of boundary layers; flow separation
  • 47.85.Gj
    Aerodynamics (applied)
  • 47.85.lb
    Drag reduction in flow control
  • YEAR: 2009

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PUBLICATION DATA

Coden:
JFEGA4
ISSN:
0098-2202 (print)   1528-901X (online)
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef ASME

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