Litcius/Paper detail

Assessment of conventional and air-jet wheel deflectors for drag reduction of the DrivAer model

Kaloki Nabutola, Sandra K. S. Boetcher

2021Advances in Aerodynamics11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Aerodynamic drag is a large resistance force to vehicle motion, particularly at highway speeds. Conventional wheel deflectors were designed to reduce the wheel drag and, consequently, the overall vehicle drag; however, they may actually be detrimental to vehicle aerodynamics in modern designs. In the present study, computational fluid dynamics simulations were conducted on the notchback DrivAer model—a simplified, yet realistic, open-source vehicle model that incorporates features of a modern passenger vehicle. Conventional and air-jet wheel deflectors upstream of the front wheels were introduced to assess the effect of underbody-flow deflection on the vehicle drag. Conventional wheel-deflector designs with varying heights were observed and compared to 45 ∘ and 90 ∘ air-jet wheel deflectors. The conventional wheel deflectors reduced wheel drag but resulted in an overall drag increase of up to 10%. For the cases studied, the 90 ∘ air jet did not reduce the overall drag compared to the baseline case; the 45 ∘ air jet presented drag benefits of up to 1.5% at 35 m/s and above. Compared to conventional wheel deflectors, air-jet wheel deflectors have the potential to reduce vehicle drag to a greater extent and present the benefit of being turned off at lower speeds when flow deflection is undesirable, thus improving efficiency and reducing emissions.

Topics & Concepts

DragDeflection (physics)Aerodynamic dragAerodynamicsZero-lift drag coefficientLift-induced dragAerospace engineeringParasitic dragMarine engineeringMechanicsPhysicsEngineeringOpticsAerodynamics and Fluid Dynamics ResearchWind and Air Flow StudiesFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows