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Provided by: FLIR Systems Australia 13/07/2007 - The Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR) is Germany’s national research centre for aeronautics and space. The organization focuses on both fundamental and applied aerospace research and development. Its strategic objective is to enhance the competitiveness of Germany and Europe’s aerospace and air transport industries. DLR has also set itself the challenge of making the fast-growing air transport sector efficient, environmentally friendly and sustainable. DLR employs around 5,100 people in 31 establishments and maintains offices in Brussels, Paris and Washington DC. Some 700 researchers and scientists work at the research centre annex airstrip in Braunschweig (northern Germany). The site is home to the Institute of Aerodynamics and Flow Technology. Aerodynamics and infrared A long-time research project at the Braunschweig-based Institute of Aerodynamics and Flow Technology focuses on the so-called boundary layer flow around an aircraft. This thin layer transmits friction forces from the aircraft surface to the air around the aircraft. The boundary layer can be ‘laminar’, which means that it deals with small friction forces resulting in small losses of propulsion energy. Or it can be ‘turbulent’, which means that it is subject to much larger friction forces, requiring a significantly larger energy consumption to keep the plane going. Compare it to water flowing from a tap at home: at first it will come out in a laminar flow, when you turn it on more (at a higher flow speed) the water flow will be turbulent. Special ‘laminar’ airfoils are currently widely used for wings of gliders. Commercial aircrafts, however, could also be designed to use the ‘laminar’ technology. The laminar wing is said to reduce fuel consumption by 15%, which is an impressive figure nowadays and the reason why DLR is investing resources in relevant research projects. Thermography in wind tunnels Due to the different heat transfer in the laminar and turbulent flow areas, there is a different cooling or heating pattern in these areas which can be visualized with an infrared camera. So the surface in the laminar boundary layer shows a different temperature than in the turbulent boundary layer. “If the wind tunnel model is manufactured from metal, we provide a thermal insulation of the surfaces”, says Dr. Klaus de Groot of the Braunschweig-based Institute of Aerodynamics and Flow Technology. “Otherwise, the large heat conduction inside the model would destroy small temperature differences. And, of course, we avoid the typical reflection which appears when metallic objects are scanned with infrared. We do this by putting a coat of lacquer or a thin plastic layer”. Thermography during test flights This combination showed that a long extent of laminar flow can be achieved on wings of commuter aircrafts. Further testing at even higher speeds has proven that the extent of laminar flow can be prolonged by sucking a part of the boundary layer through a porous surface: 50 micrometer small holes drilled by a laser on the wing’s front part siphon off part of the flow, and enhance the extent of the laminar flow. These findings would have been hardly gathered without thermography. “Thermography provides two-dimensional information about the entire boundary layer. And it shows us what is going on in the entire wing area on a non-contact, non destruction testing basis” says Dr. Klaus de Groot. “Moreover”, he adds, “the technological development towards Focal Plane Array cameras with Quantum Well Infrared Photodetector (QWIP) sensors has been of decisive importance for the success of our institute’s research projects: the ThermaCAM™ SC3000 camera grasps temperature differences as small as 0.5 K.” Conclusion About FLIR Systems Feature Articles
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