“DRAG AND LIFT FORCE ”
Introduction:
Drag Force:
The drag force is present everywhere around us. We thrive in a ball of fluids (air and water). Drag forces appear whenever there is motion in air or water or in any other fluid.When objects travel through fluids (a gas or a liquid), they will undoubtedly encounter resistive forces called drag forces.The drag force always acts in the opposite direction to fluid flow. If the body’s motion exists in the fluid-like air, it is called aerodynamic drag. And, if the fluid is water, it is called hydrodynamic drag.
Direction of motion
Lift Force:
Lift is a mechanical
force. It is generated by the interaction and contact of a solid body with a
fluid (liquid or gas). It is not generated by a force field, in the sense
of a gravitational field,or an electromagnetic field, where one
object can affect another object without being in physical contact. For lift to
be generated, the solid body must be in contact with the fluid: no fluid, no
lift.
Drag Force Types:
- Parasite Drag:
Parasite drag is a
drag produced due to the motion of an object through a fluid. With respect to
aviation, the object is an aircraft and the fluid is the atmospheric air.
Parasite drag occurs due to air molecules. Parasite drag is classified as form
drag or pressure drag, skin friction drag and interference drag.
- Skin Drag Force:
- Form drag or pressure drag:
- Interference Drag:
- Wave Drag:
Drag Force Equation:
Drag Equation is used to find the
force of drag on an object due to motion through an enclosed fluid system.
Where,
- Fd = the drag force
- ρ = the mass density of the fluid
- υ = the flow velocity relative to the object
- A = the reference area
- Cd = the drag coefficient
- where C is
the drag coefficient, A is the area of the object facing the
fluid, and ρ is the density of the fluid.
Lift force will be represented by the symbol FL.
Where,
- q = ½ * pv2
- CL =
Co-efficient of lift
- A = Area
of the body which is projected area of the body perpendicular to the
direction
of flow
- ρ = Density
of the fluid
- V = Flow velocity relative to the object
- q =
Dynamic Pressure
Demonstration with Bernoulli’s
Principle:
In
fluid dynamics, Bernoulli's principle states that an increase in the
speed of a fluid occurs simultaneously with a decrease in pressure or a
decrease in the fluid's potential energy. The principle is named after
Daniel Bernoulli, a swiss mathemetician, who published it in 1738 in his book
Hydrodynamics.
A
practical application of Bernoulli’s Principle is the venturi tube. The venturi
tube has an air inlet that narrows to a throat (constricted point) and an
outlet section that increases in diameter toward the rear. The diameter of the
outlet is the same as that of the inlet. The mass of air entering the tube must
exactly equal the mass exiting the tube. At the constriction, the speed must
increase to allow the same amount of air to pass in the same amount of time as
in all other parts of the tube. When the air speeds up, the pressure also
decreases. Past the constriction, the airflow slows and the pressure increases.
Bernoulli’s equation
formula is a relation between pressure, kinetic energy, and gravitational
potential energy of a fluid in a container.
Where p is the
pressure exerted by the fluid, v is the velocity of the fluid, ρ is the density
of the fluid and h is the height of the container.
Bernoulli’s equation
gives great insight into the balance between pressure, velocity and elevation.
Application of Lift and
Drag force:
We all know that gravity is a force that pulls everything
towards the Earth’s surface. This pull is called the weight force. Planes and
birds have to be able to provide enough lift force to oppose the weight force.
Lift is caused by the variation in air pressure when air flows under and over
an airplane’s wings. It acts upwards against weight and must be greater in
order for the aircraft to fly.
Examples of Drag Force:
- Resistance on moving vehicles.
- Floating objects.
- Resistance during a storm or heavy
wind.
- Resistance on gliders and
parachutes.
Example of lift force:
- propellers on both aircraft
and boats
- rotors on helicopters
- sails and keels on
sailboats
- hydrofoils
- wings on auto racing cars
- wind turbines.
Conclusion:
The drag and lift forces it is a most important topic to understand
fluid engineering and concept related to this.
References:
- fluid mechanics by R.K. Bansal
- https://www.simscale.com/docs/simwiki/lift-drag-pitch/
· https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lift_(force)
· https://www.symscape.com/lift-force-and-drag-force
Contributors:
1.
Karan rathod
2.
Vivekanand rathod
3.
Rajan raut
4.
Sahil kumar
5.
Vishal payyavar
6.
Rahul wagh
Great information about drag forces..
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