Improvement of XFOIL lift and drag predictions
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North-West University (South Africa).
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Abstract
XFOIL is a fast and relatively accurate panel method to analyse 2D airfoil performance. XFOIL
has proven itself over many years to be a powerful airfoil design and analysis tool. From the
literature and through the various study cases in this report, it is clear that XFOIL has a tendency
to overpredict lift and underpredict drag in certain cases. This inaccuracy in predictions
becomes increasingly apparent when analysing thick airfoils and increasing Reynolds numbers,
where the effect of high and low angles of attack also need to be considered.
In this research, improvements have been made to XFOIL by incorporating an interactive
vortex panel method to predict lift and drag in better agreement with experimental results. It
should be noted that experimental data does not represent the absolute truth, but is merely
an indication of common
fight predictions that might contribute to understanding actual
ight
performance. The reason for inaccurate predictions lay within assumptions made to allow for
quicker converging to final answers. These assumptions were studied and are discussed in this
research. Proposed improvements to XFOIL, identifed through the literature review, were then
implemented and validated against experimental data obtained from literature.
The improvements under scrutiny were developed by Ramanujam and Ozdemir (2017) and
Ramanujam, Ozdemir, and Hoeijmakers (2016) for another panel method software based on
XFOIL, called RFOIL. RFOIL is also a vortex panel method that was derived from XFOIL
but was developed to better predict the performance of wind turbine airfoils. The proposed
method focuses on the integral momentum quantities and updates the model assumptions in
the lift calculation. Ramanujam, Ozdemir, and Hoeijmakers (2016) had studied the boundary
layer quantities' momentum and displacement thickness, as predicted by XFOIL and stated
that an underprediction of the quantities is the cause of the drag underprediction of XFOIL.
Ramanujam and Ozdemir (2017) found that XFOIL utilises the inviscid solution to obtain the
results for a viscous analysis. A new approach was developed to remedy this overprediction of
lift by updating the vorticity strengths.
These improvements showed good agreement with experimental data on RFOIL but they have
not been tested on XFOIL. The goal of this report is to implement those improvements proposed
for RFOIL, into XFOIL and to then validate them to study the improvements in both lift and
drag predictions. As with RFOIL, the proposed improvements increased the accuracy of the
predictions in accordance with experimental data, but an inaccuracy still exists with thick
airfoils as XFOIL is not suited for such analyses. This will also be shown in this report.
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MEng (Mechanical Engineering), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus
