Flettner Rotor
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A Flettner rotor is a smooth cylinder with disc end plates which is spun along its long axis and, as air passes at right angles across it, the
Magnus effect The Magnus effect is a phenomenon that occurs when a spin (geometry), spinning Object (physics), object is moving through a fluid. A lift (force), lift force acts on the spinning object and its path may be deflected in a manner not present when ...
causes an aerodynamic force to be generated in the direction perpendicular to both the long axis and the direction of airflow.Seifert, Jost;
A review of the Magnus effect in aeronautics
, '' Progress in Aerospace Sciences'' Vol. 55, 2012, pp.17–45.
The rotor sail is named after the German aviation engineer and inventor
Anton Flettner Anton Flettner (1 November 1885 – 29 December 1961) was a German Aerospace engineering, aviation engineer and inventor. Born in Hattersheim am Main#Eddersheim, Eddersheim (today a district of Hattersheim am Main), Flettner made important contri ...
, who started developing the rotor sail in the 1920s. In a rotor ship, the rotors stand vertically and lift is generated at right angles to the wind, to drive the ship forwards. In a rotor airplane, the rotor extends sideways in place of a wing and upwards lift is generated.


Magnus effect

The Magnus effect is named after Gustav Magnus, the German physicist who investigated it. It describes the force generated by fluid flow over a rotating body, at right angles to both the direction of flow and the axis of rotation. This force on a rotating cylinder is known as Kutta–Joukowski lift, after Martin Kutta and Nikolai Zhukovsky (or Joukowski), who first analyzed the effect. The Flettner rotor is just one form of the Magnus rotor, which in general need not be cylindrical.


Marine applications


Rotor ships

A rotor ship uses one or more Flettner rotors mounted upright. They are rotated by the ship's engines, and act like sails to propel the ship under wind power. A conventionally-powered underwater propeller may be provided for additional operational flexibility. An early prototype, the ''Baden Baden'' (formerly the ''Buckau''), crossed the Atlantic in 1925, but interest was not revived until energy saving became a major concern in the new millennium. The E-Ship 1 was launched in 2008, and new vessels continue to appear. Since then, multiple rotor installations have been completed, including tilting rotors to allow passage beneath bridges. Typically, rotor sails have been reported to generate 5-20% fuel savings.


Stabilizers

A Flettner rotor mounted beneath the waterline of a ship's hull and emerging laterally will act to stabilize the ship in heavy seas. By controlling the direction and speed of rotation, strong lift or downforce can be generated. The largest deployment of the system to date is in the motor yacht
Eclipse An eclipse is an astronomical event which occurs when an astronomical object or spacecraft is temporarily obscured, by passing into the shadow of another body or by having another body pass between it and the viewer. This alignment of three ...
.


Rotor airplanes

Some flying machines have been built which use the Magnus effect to create lift with a rotating cylinder at the front of a wing, allowing flight at lower horizontal speeds. An early attempt to use the Magnus effect for a heavier-than-air aircraft was made in 1908 by a US member of Congress, Butler Ames of Massachusetts. A later example was the Plymouth A-A-2004 in the early 1930s, built by three inventors in New York state. French designer Jean de Chappedelaine developed his Aérogyre at much the same time. A prototype, based on a modified Caudron C.270 Luciole, was flown in 1934 with the wing rotor stationary. It crashed on its next flight, but whether the wing was rotating during that flight is unknown.


Similar devices

The Flettner rotor inspired Sigurd Johannes Savonius to invent a spinning ventilation device after a collaboration between the two inventors. Anton Flettner's company Flettner Ventilator Limited acquired Savonius' patent and still sells them in the United Kingdom.Flettner Ventilator Limited
/ref> The devices are often referred to as "Flettner ventilators" even though the mechanism more closely resembles a Savonius wind turbine, which was a 1924 invention that resulted from the same collaboration.


References

{{Flettner aircraft


External links


www.marineinsight.com - Flettner Rotor for Ships - Uses, History and Problems
Fluid dynamics Aircraft components Marine propulsion