Component Management

Plasma could cut wind resistance for trucks

29th March 2017
Enaie Azambuja
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Researchers at KTH Royal Institute of Technology are successfully testing a way to reduce drag on trucks by creating air vortices on a vehicle’s front corners. But unlike airplane vortex generators made of solid material, these are invisible ones made with the help of electric wind. KTH researcher Julie Vernet says the electric wind vortices she is testing can reduce fuel consumption by up to 5% on a flat-nosed, cab-over-engine design that is the standard for tractor trucks in Europe and Japan.

Vernet says the electric wind is created by plasma actuators, devices that apply a high voltage between two electrodes. Surrounding air molecules become ionised and accelerate through the electric field – which results in wind. There are no moving mechanical parts, and unlike vortex generators on an airplane wing, these actuators can adapt to the strength and direction of the wind, she says.

“Also, trucks can’t have sharp things sticking out of the body, so this is a way to achieve the same effect,” says project supervisor Henrik Alfredsson, Professor of Fluid Physics at KTH. Vortex generators operate on a basic aerodynamics principle – that if you reduce the separation of the airflow on the leeward side of an airfoil, you can enhance the lift and at the same time reduce the drag.

Likewise, when wind hits a truck at an angle, friction deprives the air of the energy it needs to push all the way around the opposite side of the truck. As it moves around the corner towards the leeward side of the vehicle, the air in the boundary layer slows down and cannot any longer follow the surface.

This separation of the flow forms a bubble filled with eddies and swirls of air. That, incidentally, also explains why rain drops don’t blow off your rear window but sort of swirl around instead.

A vortex generator placed at the front corner slices through the boundary layer right at its head, creating a spiral of air that mixes high velocity air into the boundary layer. This injection of high velocity air towards the surface keeps the air from separating and makes it follow the surface and thereby lowering the drag substantially.

Reducing this drag has a measurable impact. It’s estimated that more than 20% of the vehicle’s energy losses come from wind resistance. “Our ultimate goal is to reduce the flow separation that occurs on the front corners of the truck,” Vernet says. “By adding momentum close to the surface, the size of the separated region is reduced.”

The project is funded by the Swedish Energy Agencyand is being conducted in cooperation between truck manufacturer ScaniaCV AB and the Departments of Aeronautical and Vehicle Engineering and Mechanicsat KTH.

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