
An airfoil (
American English
American English, sometimes called United States English or U.S. English, is the set of variety (linguistics), varieties of the English language native to the United States. English is the Languages of the United States, most widely spoken lang ...
) or aerofoil (
British English
British English is the set of Variety (linguistics), varieties of the English language native to the United Kingdom, especially Great Britain. More narrowly, it can refer specifically to the English language in England, or, more broadly, to ...
) is a streamlined body that is capable of generating significantly more
lift than
drag. Wings, sails and propeller blades are examples of airfoils.
Foils of similar function designed with water as the working fluid are called
hydrofoil
A hydrofoil is a lifting surface, or foil, that operates in water. They are similar in appearance and purpose to aerofoils used by aeroplanes. Boats that use hydrofoil technology are also simply termed hydrofoils. As a hydrofoil craft gains sp ...
s.
When oriented at a suitable angle, a solid body moving through a
fluid
In physics, a fluid is a liquid, gas, or other material that may continuously motion, move and Deformation (physics), deform (''flow'') under an applied shear stress, or external force. They have zero shear modulus, or, in simpler terms, are M ...
deflects the oncoming fluid (for fixed-wing aircraft, a downward force), resulting in a force on the airfoil in the direction opposite to the deflection. This force is known as
aerodynamic force
In fluid mechanics, an aerodynamic force is a force exerted on a body by the air (or other gas) in which the body is immersed, and is due to the relative motion between the body and the gas.
Force
There are two causes of aerodynamic force:
* ...
and can be resolved into two components: lift (
perpendicular
In geometry, two geometric objects are perpendicular if they intersect at right angles, i.e. at an angle of 90 degrees or π/2 radians. The condition of perpendicularity may be represented graphically using the '' perpendicular symbol'', � ...
to the remote
freestream velocity) and drag (
parallel to the freestream velocity).
The lift on an airfoil is primarily the result of its
angle of attack
In fluid dynamics, angle of attack (AOA, α, or \alpha) is the angle between a Airfoil#Airfoil terminology, reference line on a body (often the chord (aircraft), chord line of an airfoil) and the vector (geometry), vector representing the relat ...
. Most foil shapes require a positive angle of attack to generate lift, but
cambered airfoils can generate lift at zero angle of attack. Airfoils can be designed for use at different speeds by modifying their geometry: those for
subsonic flight
Aerodynamics () is the study of the motion of air, particularly when affected by a solid object, such as an airplane wing. It involves topics covered in the field of fluid dynamics and its subfield of gas dynamics, and is an important domain of ...
generally have a rounded
leading edge, while those designed for
supersonic flight tend to be slimmer with a sharp leading edge. All have a sharp
trailing edge
The trailing edge of an aerodynamic surface such as a wing is its rear edge, where the airflow separated by the leading edge meets.Crane, Dale: ''Dictionary of Aeronautical Terms, third edition'', page 521. Aviation Supplies & Academics, 1997. ...
.
The air deflected by an airfoil causes it to generate a lower-pressure "shadow" above and behind itself. This pressure difference is accompanied by a velocity difference, via
Bernoulli's principle
Bernoulli's principle is a key concept in fluid dynamics that relates pressure, speed and height. For example, for a fluid flowing horizontally Bernoulli's principle states that an increase in the speed occurs simultaneously with a decrease i ...
, so the resulting flowfield about the airfoil has a higher average velocity on the upper surface than on the lower surface. In some situations (e.g.,
inviscid potential flow
In fluid dynamics, potential flow or irrotational flow refers to a description of a fluid flow with no vorticity in it. Such a description typically arises in the limit of vanishing viscosity, i.e., for an inviscid fluid and with no vorticity pre ...
) the lift force can be related directly to the average top/bottom velocity difference without computing the pressure by using the concept of
circulation and the
Kutta–Joukowski theorem
The Kutta–Joukowski theorem is a fundamental theorem in aerodynamics used for the calculation of lift of an airfoil (and any two-dimensional body including circular cylinders) translating in a uniform fluid at a constant speed so large that th ...
.
Overview
The wings and stabilizers of
fixed-wing aircraft
A fixed-wing aircraft is a heavier-than-air aircraft, such as an airplane, which is capable of flight using aerodynamic lift. Fixed-wing aircraft are distinct from rotary-wing aircraft (in which a rotor mounted on a spinning shaft generate ...
, as well as
helicopter
A helicopter is a type of rotorcraft in which Lift (force), lift and thrust are supplied by horizontally spinning Helicopter rotor, rotors. This allows the helicopter to VTOL, take off and land vertically, to hover (helicopter), hover, and ...
rotor blades, are built with airfoil-shaped cross sections. Airfoils are also found in propellers,
fans,
compressors and
turbines
A turbine ( or ) (from the Greek , ''tyrbē'', or Latin ''turbo'', meaning vortex) is a rotary mechanical device that extracts energy from a fluid flow and converts it into useful work. The work produced can be used for generating electrical ...
. Sails are also airfoils, and the underwater surfaces of sailboats, such as the
centerboard
A centreboard or centerboard (US) is a retractable hull appendage which pivots out of a slot in the hull of a sailboat, known as a ''centreboard trunk'' (UK) or ''centerboard case'' (US). The retractability allows the centreboard to be raised t ...
,
rudder
A rudder is a primary control surface used to steer a ship, boat, submarine, hovercraft, airship, or other vehicle that moves through a fluid medium (usually air or water). On an airplane, the rudder is used primarily to counter adverse yaw ...
, and
keel
The keel is the bottom-most longitudinal structural element of a watercraft, important for stability. On some sailboats, it may have a fluid dynamics, hydrodynamic and counterbalancing purpose as well. The keel laying, laying of the keel is often ...
, are similar in cross-section and operate on the same principles as airfoils. Swimming and flying creatures and even many plants and
sessile organisms employ airfoils/hydrofoils, common examples being bird wings, the bodies of fish, and the shape of
sand dollars. An airfoil-shaped wing can create
downforce on an
automobile
A car, or an automobile, is a motor vehicle with wheels. Most definitions of cars state that they run primarily on roads, Car seat, seat one to eight people, have four wheels, and mainly transport private transport#Personal transport, peopl ...
or other motor vehicle, improving
traction.
When the wind is obstructed by an object such as a flat plate, a building, or the deck of a bridge, the object will experience
drag and also an aerodynamic force perpendicular to the wind. This does not mean the object qualifies as an airfoil. Airfoils are highly-efficient lifting shapes, able to generate more lift than similarly sized flat plates of the same area, and able to generate lift with significantly less drag. Airfoils are used in the design of aircraft, propellers, rotor blades, wind turbines and other applications of aeronautical engineering.
A lift and drag curve obtained in
wind tunnel
A wind tunnel is "an apparatus for producing a controlled stream of air for conducting aerodynamic experiments". The experiment is conducted in the test section of the wind tunnel and a complete tunnel configuration includes air ducting to and f ...
testing is shown on the right. The curve represents an airfoil with a positive
camber so some lift is produced at zero angle of attack. With increased angle of attack, lift increases in a roughly linear relation, called the ''slope'' of the lift curve. At about 18 degrees this airfoil
stalls, and lift falls off quickly beyond that. The drop in lift can be explained by the action of the upper-surface
boundary layer
In physics and fluid mechanics, a boundary layer is the thin layer of fluid in the immediate vicinity of a Boundary (thermodynamic), bounding surface formed by the fluid flowing along the surface. The fluid's interaction with the wall induces ...
, which separates and greatly thickens over the upper surface at and past the stall angle. The thickened boundary layer's
displacement thickness changes the airfoil's effective shape, in particular it reduces its effective
camber, which modifies the overall flow field so as to reduce the
circulation and the lift. The thicker boundary layer also causes a large increase in
pressure drag, so that the overall drag increases sharply near and past the stall point.
Airfoil design is a major facet of
aerodynamics
Aerodynamics () is the study of the motion of atmosphere of Earth, air, particularly when affected by a solid object, such as an airplane wing. It involves topics covered in the field of fluid dynamics and its subfield of gas dynamics, and is an ...
. Various airfoils serve different flight regimes. Asymmetric airfoils can generate lift at zero angle of attack, while a symmetric airfoil may better suit frequent inverted flight as in an
aerobatic airplane. In the region of the
ailerons
An aileron (French for "little wing" or "fin") is a hinged flight control surface usually forming part of the trailing edge of each wing of a fixed-wing aircraft. Ailerons are used in pairs to control the aircraft in roll (or movement around ...
and near a
wingtip a symmetric airfoil can be used to increase the range of angles of attack to avoid
spin–
stall. Thus a large range of angles can be used without
boundary layer separation. Subsonic airfoils have a round leading edge, which is naturally insensitive to the angle of attack. The cross section is not strictly circular, however: the
radius of curvature
In differential geometry, the radius of curvature, , is the reciprocal of the curvature. For a curve, it equals the radius of the circular arc which best approximates the curve at that point. For surfaces, the radius of curvature is the radius ...
is increased before the wing achieves maximum thickness to minimize the chance of boundary layer separation. This elongates the wing and moves the point of maximum thickness back from the leading edge.
Supersonic airfoils are much more angular in shape and can have a very sharp leading edge, which is very sensitive to angle of attack. A
supercritical airfoil has its maximum thickness close to the leading edge to have a lot of length to slowly shock the supersonic flow back to subsonic speeds. Generally such
transonic
Transonic (or transsonic) flow is air flowing around an object at a speed that generates regions of both subsonic and Supersonic speed, supersonic airflow around that object. The exact range of speeds depends on the object's critical Mach numb ...
airfoils and also the supersonic airfoils have a low camber to reduce
drag divergence. Modern aircraft wings may have different airfoil sections along the wing span, each one optimized for the conditions in each section of the wing.
Movable high-lift devices,
flaps and sometimes
slats, are fitted to airfoils on almost every aircraft. A trailing edge flap acts similarly to an aileron; however, it, as opposed to an aileron, can be retracted partially into the wing if not used.
A laminar flow wing has a maximum thickness in the middle camber line. Analyzing the
Navier–Stokes equations
The Navier–Stokes equations ( ) are partial differential equations which describe the motion of viscous fluid substances. They were named after French engineer and physicist Claude-Louis Navier and the Irish physicist and mathematician Georg ...
in the linear regime shows that a negative pressure gradient along the flow has the same effect as reducing the speed. So with the maximum camber in the middle, maintaining a laminar flow over a larger percentage of the wing at a higher cruising speed is possible. However, some surface contamination will disrupt the laminar flow, making it turbulent. For example, with rain on the wing, the flow will be turbulent. Under certain conditions, insect debris on the wing will cause the loss of small regions of laminar flow as well. Before NASA's research in the 1970s and 1980s the aircraft design community understood from application attempts in the WW II era that laminar flow wing designs were not practical using common manufacturing tolerances and surface imperfections. That belief changed after new manufacturing methods were developed with composite materials (e.g. laminar-flow airfoils developed by Professor
Franz Wortmann for use with wings made of
fibre-reinforced plastic). Machined metal methods were also introduced. NASA's research in the 1980s revealed the practicality and usefulness of laminar flow wing designs and opened the way for laminar-flow applications on modern practical aircraft surfaces, from subsonic general aviation aircraft to transonic large transport aircraft, to supersonic designs.
Schemes have been devised to define airfoils – an example is the
NACA system. Various airfoil generation systems are also used. An example of a general purpose airfoil that finds wide application, and pre–dates the NACA system, is the
Clark-Y. Today, airfoils can be designed for specific functions by the use of computer programs.
Airfoil terminology

The various terms related to airfoils are defined below:
*The ''suction surface'' (a.k.a. upper surface) is generally associated with higher velocity and lower static pressure.
*The ''pressure surface'' (a.k.a. lower surface) has a comparatively higher static pressure than the suction surface. The pressure gradient between these two surfaces contributes to the lift force generated for a given airfoil.
The geometry of the airfoil is described with a variety of terms :
*The ''
leading edge'' is the point at the front of the airfoil that has maximum curvature (minimum radius).
*The ''
trailing edge
The trailing edge of an aerodynamic surface such as a wing is its rear edge, where the airflow separated by the leading edge meets.Crane, Dale: ''Dictionary of Aeronautical Terms, third edition'', page 521. Aviation Supplies & Academics, 1997. ...
'' is the point on the airfoil most remote from the leading edge. The angle between the upper and lower surfaces at the trailing edge is the ''trailing edge angle''.
*The ''
chord line'' is the straight line connecting leading and trailing edges. The ''chord length'', or simply chord,
, is the length of the chord line. That is the reference dimension of the airfoil section.

The shape of the airfoil is defined using the following geometrical parameters:
*The ''mean camber line'' or ''mean line'' is the locus of points midway between the upper and lower surfaces. Its shape depends on the thickness distribution along the chord;
*The ''thickness'' of an airfoil varies along the chord. It may be measured in either of two ways:
** Thickness measured perpendicular to the camber line. This is sometimes described as the "American convention";
** Thickness measured perpendicular to the chord line. This is sometimes described as the "British convention".
Some important parameters to describe an airfoil's shape are its ''
camber'' and its ''thickness''. For example, an airfoil of the NACA 4-digit series such as the NACA 2415 (to be read as 2 – 4 – 15) describes an airfoil with a camber of 0.02 chord located at 0.40 chord, with 0.15 chord of maximum thickness.
Finally, important concepts used to describe the airfoil's behaviour when moving through a fluid are:
*The ''
aerodynamic center'', which is the chord-wise location about which the pitching moment is independent of the lift coefficient and the angle of attack.
*The ''
center of pressure'', which is the chord-wise location about which the ''
pitching moment
In aerodynamics, the pitching moment on an airfoil is the Moment (physics), moment (or torque) produced by the aerodynamic force with respect to the aerodynamic center on the airfoil . The pitching moment on the wing of an airplane is part of ...
'' is momentarily zero. On a cambered airfoil, the center of pressure is not a fixed location as it moves in response to changes in angle of attack and lift coefficient.
In two-dimensional flow around a uniform wing of infinite span, the slope of the
lift curve
Lift or LIFT may refer to:
Physical devices
* Elevator, or lift, a device used for raising and lowering people or goods
** Paternoster lift, a type of lift using a continuous chain of cars which do not stop
** Patient lift, or Hoyer lift, mobi ...
is determined primarily by the ''trailing edge angle''. The slope is greatest if the angle is zero; and decreases as the angle increases. For a wing of finite span, the
aspect ratio
The aspect ratio of a geometry, geometric shape is the ratio of its sizes in different dimensions. For example, the aspect ratio of a rectangle is the ratio of its longer side to its shorter side—the ratio of width to height, when the rectangl ...
of the wing also significantly influences the slope of the curve. As aspect ratio decreases, the slope also decreases.
Thin airfoil theory
Thin airfoil theory is a simple theory of airfoils that relates
angle of attack
In fluid dynamics, angle of attack (AOA, α, or \alpha) is the angle between a Airfoil#Airfoil terminology, reference line on a body (often the chord (aircraft), chord line of an airfoil) and the vector (geometry), vector representing the relat ...
to lift for incompressible,
inviscid flow
In fluid dynamics, inviscid flow is the flow of an ''inviscid fluid'' which is a fluid with zero viscosity.
The Reynolds number of inviscid flow approaches infinity as the viscosity approaches zero. When viscous forces are neglected, such as the ...
s. It was devised by German mathematician
Max Munk and further refined by British aerodynamicist
Hermann Glauert and others in the 1920s. The theory idealizes the flow around an airfoil as two-dimensional flow around a thin airfoil. It can be imagined as addressing an airfoil of zero thickness and infinite
wingspan
The wingspan (or just span) of a bird or an airplane is the distance from one wingtip to the opposite wingtip. For example, the Boeing 777–200 has a wingspan of , and a wandering albatross (''Diomedea exulans'') caught in 1965 had a wingsp ...
.
Thin airfoil theory was particularly notable in its day because it provided a sound theoretical basis for the following important properties of airfoils in two-dimensional inviscid flow:
# on a symmetric airfoil, the
center of pressure and
aerodynamic center are coincident and lie exactly one quarter of the
chord behind the leading edge.
# on a
cambered airfoil, the aerodynamic center lies exactly one quarter of the chord behind the leading edge, but the position of the center of pressure moves when the angle of attack changes.
# the slope of the ''lift coefficient versus angle of attack'' line is
units per radian.
As a consequence of (3), the section
lift coefficient
In fluid dynamics, the lift coefficient () is a dimensionless quantity that relates the lift generated by a lifting body to the fluid density around the body, the fluid velocity and an associated reference area. A lifting body is a foil or a co ...
of a thin symmetric airfoil of infinite wingspan is:
:
:where
is the section lift coefficient,
:
is the
angle of attack
In fluid dynamics, angle of attack (AOA, α, or \alpha) is the angle between a Airfoil#Airfoil terminology, reference line on a body (often the chord (aircraft), chord line of an airfoil) and the vector (geometry), vector representing the relat ...
in radians, measured relative to the
chord line.
(The above expression is also applicable to a cambered airfoil where
is the angle of attack measured relative to the
zero-lift line instead of the chord line.)
Also as a consequence of (3), the section lift coefficient of a cambered airfoil of infinite wingspan is:
:
:where
is the section lift coefficient when the angle of attack is zero.
Thin airfoil theory assumes the air is an
inviscid fluid so does not account for the
stall of the airfoil, which usually occurs at an angle of attack between 10° and 15° for typical airfoils. In the mid-late 2000s, however, a theory predicting the onset of leading-edge stall was proposed by Wallace J. Morris II in his doctoral thesis. Morris's subsequent refinements contain the details on the current state of theoretical knowledge on the leading-edge stall phenomenon. Morris's theory predicts the critical angle of attack for leading-edge stall onset as the condition at which a global separation zone is predicted in the solution for the inner flow. Morris's theory demonstrates that a subsonic flow about a thin airfoil can be described in terms of an outer region, around most of the airfoil chord, and an inner region, around the nose, that asymptotically match each other. As the flow in the outer region is dominated by classical thin airfoil theory, Morris's equations exhibit many components of thin airfoil theory.
Derivation
In thin airfoil theory, the width of the (2D) airfoil is assumed negligible, and the airfoil itself replaced with a 1D blade along its camber line, oriented at the
angle of attack
In fluid dynamics, angle of attack (AOA, α, or \alpha) is the angle between a Airfoil#Airfoil terminology, reference line on a body (often the chord (aircraft), chord line of an airfoil) and the vector (geometry), vector representing the relat ...
. Let the position along the blade be , ranging from at the wing's front to at the trailing edge; the camber of the airfoil, , is assumed sufficiently small that one need not distinguish between and position relative to the fuselage.
The flow across the airfoil generates a circulation around the blade, which can be modeled as a
vortex sheet of position-varying strength . The
Kutta condition implies that , but the strength is singular at the bladefront, with for . If the
main flow has
density
Density (volumetric mass density or specific mass) is the ratio of a substance's mass to its volume. The symbol most often used for density is ''ρ'' (the lower case Greek letter rho), although the Latin letter ''D'' (or ''d'') can also be u ...
, then the
Kutta–Joukowski theorem
The Kutta–Joukowski theorem is a fundamental theorem in aerodynamics used for the calculation of lift of an airfoil (and any two-dimensional body including circular cylinders) translating in a uniform fluid at a constant speed so large that th ...
gives that the total lift force is proportional to
and its moment about the leading edge proportional to
From the
Biot–Savart law
In physics, specifically electromagnetism, the Biot–Savart law ( or ) is an equation describing the magnetic field generated by a constant electric current. It relates the magnetic field to the magnitude, direction, length, and proximity of the ...
, the vorticity produces a flow field
oriented
normal to the airfoil at . Since the airfoil is an
impermeable surface, the flow
must balance an inverse flow from . By the
small-angle approximation, is inclined at angle relative to the blade at position , and the normal component is correspondingly . Thus, must satisfy the
convolution
In mathematics (in particular, functional analysis), convolution is a operation (mathematics), mathematical operation on two function (mathematics), functions f and g that produces a third function f*g, as the integral of the product of the two ...
equation
In mathematics, an equation is a mathematical formula that expresses the equality of two expressions, by connecting them with the equals sign . The word ''equation'' and its cognates in other languages may have subtly different meanings; for ...
which uniquely determines it in terms of known quantities.
An explicit solution can be obtained through first the
change of variablesand then expanding both and as a nondimensionalized
Fourier series
A Fourier series () is an Series expansion, expansion of a periodic function into a sum of trigonometric functions. The Fourier series is an example of a trigonometric series. By expressing a function as a sum of sines and cosines, many problems ...
in with a modified lead term:
The resulting lift and moment depend on only the first few terms of this series.
The
lift coefficient
In fluid dynamics, the lift coefficient () is a dimensionless quantity that relates the lift generated by a lifting body to the fluid density around the body, the fluid velocity and an associated reference area. A lifting body is a foil or a co ...
satisfies
and the moment coefficient
The moment about the 1/4 chord point will thus be
From this it follows that the
center of pressure is aft of the 'quarter-chord' point , by
The
aerodynamic center is the position at which the pitching moment does not ''vary'' with a change in lift coefficient:
Thin-airfoil theory shows that, in two-dimensional inviscid flow, the aerodynamic center is at the quarter-chord position.
See also
*
Circulation control wing
*
Hydrofoil
A hydrofoil is a lifting surface, or foil, that operates in water. They are similar in appearance and purpose to aerofoils used by aeroplanes. Boats that use hydrofoil technology are also simply termed hydrofoils. As a hydrofoil craft gains sp ...
*
Kline–Fogleman airfoil
The Kline–Fogleman airfoil or KF airfoil is a simple airfoil design with single or multiple steps along the length of the wing. The purpose of the step, it is claimed, is to allow some of the displaced air to fall into a pocket behind the step ...
*
Küssner effect
*
Parafoil
*
Wing configuration
The wing configuration or planform of a fixed-wing aircraft (including both glider (aircraft), gliders and powered aeroplanes) is its arrangement of lifting and related surfaces.
Aircraft designs are often classified by their wing configuratio ...
References
Citations
General Sources
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Further reading
*
* Ali Kamranpay, Alireza Mehrabadi
Numerical Analysis of NACA Airfoil 0012 at Different Attack Angles and Obtaining its Aerodynamic Coefficients.Journal of Mechatronics and Automation. 2019; 6(3): 8–16p.
*
External links
Airfoil & Hydrofoil Reference ApplicationFoilSimAn airfoil simulator from NASA
Airfoil Playground - Interactive WebAppAirflow across a wing (University of Cambridge)DesignFOILAn airfoil generation & analysis tool that no longer requires registration.
{{Authority control
Aerodynamics
Aircraft wing design