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20. What is a supercritical airfoil?

Before answering this question, we need to discuss some basics of high speed flight. As
speed increases, the compressibility (or ability to be squeezed into a smaller volume) of
air increases. What this means in practical terms is that the density of air increases at
high speeds resulting in greater drag on an airfoil. What a supercritical airfoil is
designed to do is delay the speed at which the compressibilty effect becomes significant
so that drag will be reduced.
To be more precise in this discussion, we need to introduce the terms "Mach number,"
"shock wave," and "transonic." The Mach number is simply a ratio of the object's
airspeed to the speed of sound at the current altitude. Thus, an aircraft flying at half the
speed of sound is said to be flying at Mach 0.5 while an aircraft flying at the speed of
sound is said to be flying sonic, or at Mach 1. When the flow over any portion of a body
in flight reaches Mach 1, a shock wave will be created at that point. Across the shock,
the pressure and density of the air increase significantly resulting in large increases in
drag. The range of speeds over which the flow velocity over a body is a mixture of
subsonic (i.e. less than Mach 1) and supersonic (i.e. greater than Mach 1) is called
transonic. Although the exact range of transonic Mach numbers will vary for different
aircraft configurations and operating conditions, the transonic regime is generally said to
be between Mach 0.7 or 0.8 and Mach 1.2 or 1.3.
Now the first question you may ask is why will the airflow be Mach 1 at some point on a
body when the overall airflow (or "freestream" flow) is only at Mach 0.7 or 0.8. The
reason for this is rather simple. Recall that an airfoil produces lift because of its curved
shape. Air flows faster over the top of the airfoil than the bottom because the top has
greater curvature. Higher speed means lower pressure, and this difference in pressure
between the upper and lower surfaces generates lift. Thus, since the flow accelerates
over the top of an airfoil, it follows naturally that a point here can reach Mach 1 when the
freestream value is much lower. The freestream Mach number at which the speed just
reaches Mach 1 at this solitary point on the body is called the "critical Mach number."
As the freestream Mach number increases above the critical Mach number, "bubbles" of
supersonic flow are created over the upper and lower surfaces of the airfoil, as
illustrated here. Note that each bubble is accompanied by a shock normal (i.e.
perpendicular) to the surface of the airfoil, or a so-called normal shock. This is the
strongest type of shock wave since it generates the largest variations in pressure and
density. These shocks slow the airflow thereby increasing pressure and creating an
"adverse pressure gradient." This gradient may result in a rapid separation of the airflow
from the surface of the airfoil. The resulting turbulent wake created by such a separation
causes a rapid increase in drag known as wave drag. The Mach number at which
separation begins to occur is known as the "drag divergence Mach number."
Several methods exist to reduce wave drag, including the use of swept wings, slender
or thin bodies, and supercritical airfoils. These airfoils have critical Mach numbers very

close to one (hence the term supercritical) thereby delaying and reducing the large
increase in drag due to wave drag. An example of such an airfoil is shown below.

Whitcomb supercritical airfoil

The basic design approach behind these shapes is to flatten the upper surface of the
airfoil to reduce flow acceleration and to use a highly cambered aft section to generate
the majority of the lift. The disadvantage of this approach is that aft-loaded wings shift
the center of lift back which necessitates moving the wings forward. This design tradeoff
results in larger pitching moments, the need for larger and heavier control surfaces, and
the need for stronger and heavier wing structures.
To give some idea of the practical benefit of the supercritical airfoil, Air Force and NASA
researchers under the auspices of the Transonic Aircraft Technology (TACT) program
modified a basic F-111 bomber and replaced the existing NACA 64-210 wing airfoil with
a supercritical shape of equal thickness. In so doing, they managed to increase the drag
divergence Mach number by 16%, from Mach 0.76 to Mach 0.88. This example
illustrates how significant the use of supercritical airfoils can be in improving the
performance of aircraft cruising in the transonic regime.

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