Resumen:
The aim of this investigation is to assess if the use of Natural Laminar Flow (NLF) aerofoils alone
improves the efficiency of a wing in comparison to their NACA equivalents.
To compare performance, the lift-to-drag ratio (Efficiency) of the wings has been considered. A
cruise speed range from M0.1 to M0.3 was analysed for the low-speed wing, while a Mach sweep
between M0.3 and M0.85 was assessed for the high-speed wing. A final analysis was performed
to evaluate the effect of the presence of a sweepback angle in the wing, from straight leading edge
to a 10-degree-sweepback wing.
For the low-speed wing, it was observed that the efficiency of the laminar wing is slightly
decreasing with speed (up to 17% between M0.1 and M0.3) but is increasingly higher than in the
NACA wing (from 5% at M0.1 to 16% at M0.3). This means that the aim of the laminar aerofoil
is met, so that for a cruise speed between 100 and 300km/h lower drag is produced and therefore
lower thrust (and fuel consumption) is required.
In the case of the high-speed application, it was found that the laminar flow wing had lower
efficiencies when compared to its NACA equivalent. Analysing the results, it was noted that the
r...