Zero-lift drag coefficient

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

In aerodynamics, the zero-lift drag coefficient C_{D,0} is a dimensionless parameter which relates an aircraft's zero-lift drag force to its size, speed, and flying altitude.

Mathematically, zero-lift drag coefficient is defined as C_{D,0} = C_D - C_{D,i}, where C_D is the total drag coefficient for a given power, speed, and altitude, and C_{D,i} is the lift-induced drag coefficient at the same conditions. Thus, zero-lift drag coefficient is reflective of parasitic drag which makes it very useful in understanding how "clean" or streamlined an aircraft's aerodynamics are. For example, a Sopwith Camel biplane of World War I which had many wires and bracing struts as well as fixed landing gear, had a zero-lift drag coefficient of approximately 0.0378. Compare a C_{D,0} value of 0.0161 for the streamlined P-51 Mustang of World War II[1] which compares very favorably even with the best modern aircraft.

The drag at zero-lift can be more easily conceptualized as the drag area (f) which is simply the product of zero-lift drag coefficient and aircraft's wing area (C_{D,0} \times S where S is the wing area). Parasitic drag experienced by an aircraft with a given drag area is approximately equal to the drag of a flat square disk with the same area which is held perpendicular to the direction of flight. The Sopwith Camel has a drag area of 8.73 sq ft (0.811 m2), compared to 3.80 sq ft (0.353 m2) for the P-51. Both aircraft have a similar wing area, again reflecting the Mustang's superior aerodynamics in spite of much larger size.[1] In another comparison with the Camel, a very large but streamlined aircraft such as the Lockheed Constellation has a considerably smaller zero-lift drag coefficient (0.0211 vs. 0.0378) in spite of having a much larger drag area (34.82 ft² vs. 8.73 ft²).

Furthermore, an aircraft's maximum speed is proportional to the cube root of the ratio of power to drag area, that is:

V_{max}\ \propto\ \sqrt[3]{power/f}.[1]

Estimating zero-lift drag[1]

As noted earlier, C_{D,0} = C_D - C_{D,i}.

The total drag coefficient can be estimated as:

C_D = \frac{550 \eta P}{\frac{1}{2} \rho_0 [\sigma S (1.47V)^3]},

where \eta is the propulsive efficiency, P is engine power in horsepower, \rho_0 sea-level air density in slugs/cubic foot, \sigma is the atmospheric density ratio for an altitude other than sea level, S is the aircraft's wing area in square feet, and V is the aircraft's speed in miles per hour. Substituting 0.002378 for \rho_0, the equation is simplified to:

C_D = 1.456 \times 10^5 (\frac{\eta P}{\sigma S V^3}).

The induced drag coefficient can be estimated as:

C_{D,i} = \frac{C_L^2}{\pi A \epsilon},

where C_L is the lift coefficient, A is the aspect ratio, and \epsilon is the aircraft's efficiency factor.

Substituting for C_L gives:

C_{D,i}=\frac{4.822 \times 10^4}{A \epsilon \sigma^2 V^4} (W/S)^2,

where W/S is the wing loading in lb/ft².

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.