Combined Devices for Turbulent-Drag Reduction

1986 
Aircraft skin-friction drag reduced as much as 15 percent. One effective drag-reduction technique involves use of riblets. Riblets are longitudinal striations or grooves machined on originally smooth surface. Grooves alined with flow. Grooves have depths and spacings on order of turbulent wallstreak and burst dimensions and designed to change near-wall structure of turbulent boundary layer. Another approach, using large-eddy-breakup (LEBU) devices, or turbulence manipulators or ribbons also demonstrated reductions in local skin friction and net drag in air. LEBU device consists of thin, ribbonlike strips or airfoils suspended parallel to test surface and positioned within turbulent boundary layer. Technique potentially reduce net skin-friction drag by at least 15 percent on turbulent boundary layer of aircraft, representing possible annual savings in fuel costs of $300 to $400 million for U.S. commercial fleet. Also applicable to frictionloss reduction inside pipes and ducts, contributing to increased efficiency of pumps, heat exchangers, air conditioners, and other devices involving fluid flow.
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