4.8 Article

Aerodynamic integration produces a vehicle shape with a coefficient

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2106406118

关键词

aerodynamics; drag; computational fluid dynamics; wind tunnel

资金

  1. Department of Energy (DOE) Vehicle Technologies Program
  2. DOE Energy Efficient Mobility Systems Program
  3. US DOE by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [LLNL-JRNL-821128, DE-AC5207NA27344]

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By using wind tunnel measurements and computational fluid dynamics simulations, a vehicle design has been demonstrated to generate negative body-axis drag in crosswinds, resulting in lower drag coefficients and potentially reducing petroleum usage in the heavy vehicle industry.
Negative drag coefficients are normally associated with a vessel outfitted with a sail to extract energy from the wind and propel the vehicle forward. Therefore, the notion of a heavy vehicle, that is, a semi truck, that generates negative aerodynamic drag without a sail or any external appendages may seem implausible, especially given the fact that these vehicles have some of the largest drag coefficients on the road today. However, using both wind tunnel measurements and computational fluid dynamics simulations, we demonstrate aerodynamically integrated vehicle shapes that generate negative body-axis drag in a crosswind as a result of large negative frontal pressures that effectively pull the vehicle forward against the wind, much like a sailboat. While negative body-axis drag exists only for wind yaw angles above a certain analytical threshold, the negative frontal pressures exist at smaller yaw angles and subsequently produce body-axis drag coefficients that are significantly less than those of modern heavy vehicles. The application of this aerodynamic phenomenon to the heavy vehicle industry would produce sizable reductions in petroleum use throughout the United States.

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