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Describes the general shape and layout of an aircraft wing From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The wing configuration or planform of a fixed-wing aircraft (including both gliders and powered aeroplanes) is its arrangement of lifting and related surfaces.
Aircraft designs are often classified by their wing configuration. For example, the Supermarine Spitfire is a conventional low wing cantilever monoplane of straight elliptical planform with moderate aspect ratio and slight dihedral.
Many variations have been tried. Sometimes the distinction between them is blurred, for example the wings of many modern combat aircraft may be described either as cropped compound deltas with (forwards or backwards) swept trailing edge, or as sharply tapered swept wings with large leading edge root extensions (or LERX). Some are therefore duplicated here under more than one heading. This is particularly so for variable geometry and combined (closed) wing types.
Most of the configurations described here have flown (if only very briefly) on full-size aircraft. A few theoretical designs are also notable.
Note on terminology: Most fixed-wing aircraft have left hand and right hand wings in a symmetrical arrangement. Strictly, such a pair of wings is called a wing plane or just plane. However, in certain situations it is common to refer to a plane as a wing, as in "a biplane has two wings", or alternatively to refer to the whole thing as a wing, as in "a biplane wing has two planes". Where the meaning is clear, this article follows common usage, only being more precise where needed to avoid real ambiguity or incorrectness.
Fixed-wing aircraft can have different numbers of wings:
Low wing |
Mid wing |
Shoulder wing |
High wing |
Parasol wing |
A fixed-wing aircraft may have more than one wing plane, stacked one above another:
Biplane |
Unequal-span biplane |
Sesquiplane |
Inverted sesquiplane |
Busemann biplane in cross-section |
Triplane |
Quadruplane |
Multiplane |
A staggered design has the upper wing slightly forward of the lower. Long thought to reduce the interference caused by the low pressure air over the lower wing mixing with the high pressure air under the upper wing; however the improvement is minimal and its primary benefit is to improve access to the fuselage. It is common on many successful biplanes and triplanes. Backwards stagger is also seen in a few examples such as the Beechcraft Staggerwing.
Unstaggered biplane |
Forwards stagger |
Backwards stagger |
Cruciform wing weapon |
Cruciform rotor wing or X wing rotor |
To support itself a wing has to be rigid and strong and consequently may be heavy. By adding external bracing, the weight can be greatly reduced. Originally such bracing was always present, but it causes a large amount of drag at higher speeds and has not been used for faster designs since the early 1930s.
The types are:
Cantilever |
Strut braced |
Wire braced |
Single-bay biplane |
Two-bay biplane |
Box wing |
Annular box wing |
Cylindrical wing |
Joined wing |
Flat annular wing |
Rhomboidal wing |
Wings can also be characterised as:
Rigid delta wing |
Flexible Rogallo wing |
The wing planform is the silhouette of the wing when viewed from above or below.
See also variable geometry types which vary the wing planform during flight.
The aspect ratio is the span divided by the mean or average chord.[10] It is a measure of how long and slender the wing appears when seen from above or below.
Low aspect ratio |
Moderate aspect ratio |
High aspect ratio |
Most variable geometry configurations vary the aspect ratio in some way, either deliberately or as a side effect.
The wing chord may be varied along the span of the wing, for both structural and aerodynamic reasons.
Constant chord |
Tapered (Trapezoidal) |
Reverse tapered |
Compound tapered |
Constant chord, tapered outer |
Elliptical |
Semi-elliptical |
Birdlike |
Batlike |
Circular |
Flying saucer |
Flat annular |
Tailless delta |
Tailed delta |
Cropped delta |
Compound delta |
Ogival delta |
Wings may be swept back, or occasionally forwards, for a variety of reasons. A small degree of sweep is sometimes used to adjust the centre of lift when the wing cannot be attached in the ideal position for some reason, such as a pilot's visibility from the cockpit. Other uses are described below.
Some types of variable geometry vary the wing sweep during flight:
Straight |
Swept |
Forward swept |
Variable sweep (swing-wing) |
Variable-geometry oblique wing |
The angle of a swept wing may also be varied, or cranked, along the span:
Crescent |
Cranked arrow |
M-wing |
W-wing |
On a few asymmetrical aircraft the left and right hand sides are not mirror-images of each other:
Asymmetrical | Torque counteraction by asymmetric span |
Variable-geometry oblique wing |
The classic aerofoil section wing is unstable in pitch, and requires some form of horizontal stabilizing surface. Also it cannot provide any significant pitch control, requiring a separate control surface (elevator) mounted elsewhere - usually on the horizontal stabilizer.
Conventional tail |
Canard |
Tandem |
Three surface |
Outboard tail |
Tailless |
Angling the wings up or down spanwise from root to tip can help to resolve various design issues, such as stability and control in flight.
Some biplanes have different degrees of dihedral/anhedral on different wings. The Sopwith Camel had a flat upper wing and dihedral on the lower wing, while the Hanriot HD-1 had dihedral on the upper wing but none on the lower.
Dihedral |
Anhedral |
Biplane with dihedral on both wings |
Biplane with dihedral on lower wing |
In a cranked or polyhedral wing the dihedral angle varies along the span. (Note that the description "cranked" varies in usage.[24][25][26][27] See also Cranked arrow planform.)
Gull wing |
Inverted gull wing |
Dihedral tips |
Anhedral tips |
Channel wing |
Some designs have no clear join between wing and fuselage, or body. This may be because one or other of these is missing, or because they merge into each other:
Flying wing |
Blended body |
Lifting body |
Some designs may fall into multiple categories depending on interpretation, for example many UAVs or drones can be seen either as a tailless blended wing-body or as a flying wing with a deep centre chord.
A variable geometry aircraft is able to change its physical configuration during flight.
Some types of variable geometry craft transition between fixed wing and rotary wing configurations. For more about these hybrids, see powered lift.
Variable sweep (swing-wing) |
Variable-geometry oblique wing |
Telescoping wing |
Extending wing |
Folding wing |
Variable incidence wing |
Variable camber aerofoil |
Variable thickness aerofoil |
A polymorphic wing is able to change the number of planes in flight. The Nikitin-Shevchenko IS "folding fighter" prototypes were able to morph between biplane and monoplane configurations after takeoff by folding the lower wing up into a cavity in the underside of the upper wing.
The slip wing is a variation on the polymorphic idea, in which a low-wing monoplane is fitted with a second detachable "slip" wing above it to assist takeoff. The upper wing is then released and discarded once in the air. The idea was first flown on the experimental Hillson Bi-mono.
Polymorphic wing |
Slip wing |
Aircraft may have additional minor aerodynamic surfaces. Some of these are treated as part of the overall wing configuration:
Additional minor features may be applied to an existing aerodynamic surface such as the main wing:
High-lift devices maintain lift at low speeds and delay the stall to allow slower takeoff and landing speeds:
On a swept wing, air tends to flow sideways as well as backwards and reducing this can improve the efficiency of the wing:
Vortex devices maintain airflow at low speeds and delay the stall, by creating a vortex which re-energises the boundary layer close to the wing.
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