Variable Density Tunnel
The Variable Density Tunnel was the second wind tunnel at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics Langley Research Center. Proposed by German aerospace engineer, Max Munk, student of Ludwig Prandtl, it was the world's first variable density wind tunnel and allowed for more accurate testing of small-scale models than could be obtained with atmospheric wind tunnels.
The VDT was actively used as a wind tunnel from 1923 until its retirement in the 1940s. Langley Research Center historian, James R. Hansen, wrote that the VDT provided results superior to the atmospheric wind tunnels used at the time and was responsible for making NACA, the precursor to NASA, "a world leader in aerodynamic research". It is now a National Historic Landmark and is on display on the Langley grounds, near the old Reid Conference Center.
Technical purpose
In order to accurately measure the aerodynamics of scale models, the density of the air used in a wind tunnel must also be scaled to replicate realistic conditions that would affect the full-scale aircraft.The Reynolds number is a quantification of the complex behaviors of dynamic fluids and is calculated as the ratio of inertia forces to the viscous forces in the flow. The Reynolds number is defined as
where:
- is the density of the fluid
- is the velocity of the fluid with respect to the object
- is a characteristic linear dimension
- is the dynamic viscosity of the fluid
- is the kinematic viscosity of the fluid.
History
Origin
In 1920, the National [Advisory Committee for Aeronautics] brought Max Munk, a German aerospace engineer and student of Ludwig Prandtl at University of Göttingen, to work for them in America. After the end of the First World War, Munk required two presidential orders to work at NACA, and reportedly had difficulty adjusting to NACA's organizational structure, which was not as strictly defined as those in Germany. Regardless, he proposed his revolutionary Variable Density Tunnel design in the same year.[Image: Variable_Density_Tunnel_-_GPN-2000-001311.jpg|thumb|220px|left|The tank of the Variable Density Tunnel arriving in 1922]
The large, steel pressure tank of the VDT was designed with a working pressure up to 20 atmospheres and was constructed by Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company in Newport News, Virginia. The tank was long and in diameter. The tank's wall was thick. The tank required 85 tons of steel. The test section was in diameter to match an existing NACA Wind Tunnel No. 1, which was an open-circuit tunnel operating at atmospheric pressure. The variable-density wind tunnel had a closed-circuit design with an annular return flow to minimize the volume of the tank. A fan powered by a 250-hp motor could produce an air speed up to.
[Image: Variable Density Tunnel (9423922276).jpg|thumb|300px|right|A sectional drawing of original, close-throat test section (top), and the failed, post-fire, open-throat test section from 1927 (bottom).]
During a fire in 1927, the internal wooden test section of the VDT was destroyed and was rebuilt with an open-throat design before complications required it be rebuilt again with a closed-throat design. The VDT re-entered service in 1930 and continued to aid the Langley staff in measuring the aerodynamic qualities of airfoils until it was deemed obsolete in the 1940s and converted into a pressure tank for other wind tunnels. The VDT was decommissioned in 1978 and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1985 because of its historical influence setting the foundation for the beginning of space flight.
Research usage
[Image: NACA Airfoils- Variable Density Tunnel (7605917584).jpg|thumb|300px|right|NACA airfoils (NACA 0006 through NACA 6721.) used in NACA Technical Report 460.]The tunnel was used for research for over 20 years, up to the 1940s. The VDT was mainly used to test airfoils as wing design was the most pressing problem in early aeronautics. Notably, the VDT produced the data for 78 classical airfoil shapes that were published in 1933 in "The Characteristics of 78 Related Airfoil Sections from Tests in the Variable-Density Wind Tunnel," NACA Technical Report 460. This data was used in designing American World War II aircraft such as the Douglas DC-3, the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, and the Lockheed P-38 Lightning. Additionally, the VDT served in testing thin airfoil designs and low-drag airfoils that were used to design the P-51 Mustang and reduced drag by close to two thirds.