Everything about Dihedral totally explained
Dihedral is the upward angle from horizontal in a
fixed-wing aircraft or
bird wing from root to tip, as viewed from directly in front or behind the aircraft. Diherdrals are also used in some types of kites such as box kites. The aerodynamic stabilising qualities of the dihedral were first described by
Sir George Cayley in 1808/09. Downward angled wings have negative dihedral, or
anhedral. Wings with local dihedral angles that change along the span are
polyhedral.
The purpose of positive dihedral is to confer
stability in the longitudinal (roll) axis. Most aircraft in the civilian or transport sector use dihedral for roll stability. The dihedral angle is usually greater on low-wing aircraft, compared to an otherwise similar high-wing aircraft.
Simple explanation
If a disturbance causes an aircraft to roll away from its normal wings-level position, the aircraft will sideslip in the direction of the down-going wing (see Fig. 1). This creates an airflow component along the length of the wing from tip to root called the relative wind. The dihedral angle can be seen as presenting a positive
angle of attack to this lateral flow, hence generating some additional lift. It is this lift which restores the aircraft to its normal attitude (Fig. 2).
Anhedral
Military
fighter aircraft often have near zero dihedral, or anhedral. This reduces inherent stability, but increases maneuverability. Many modern military aircraft have
relaxed stability, and require continuous small corrections made by on-board computers.
Pronounced anhedral is also often seen on aircraft with a high mounted wing, such as the
BAe 146,
Lockheed Galaxy and others. In such designs, the high mounted wing is above the
center of mass which confers roll stability due to the
pendulum effect also called the
Keel effect, so additional dihedral isn't required. In fact, such designs can be excessively stable, so the anhedral is added to cancel out some of the roll stability to ensure that the aircraft can be easily maneuvered.
Roll coupling
A side effect of dihedral can be
roll coupling, a tendency for an aircraft to
dutch roll. This is unpleasant to experience, and can lead to loss of control or can overstress an aircraft. A certain amount of anhedral can combat this effect.
Sweepback
Wing
sweepback also increases roll stability. This is another reason for anhedral configuration on military aircraft with high sweep angle, as well as on some airliners, even on low-wing aircraft such as
Tu-134 and
Tu-154.
Polyhedral
Most aircraft have been designed with planar wings with simple dihedral (or anhedral). Some pre-
World War II aircraft had
gull wings bent near the root. Modern polyhedral wing designs generally cant upwards near the wingtips, increasing effective dihedral angle.
Winglets are a special case of polyhedral.
Polyhedral is commonly seen on
gliders, and some other aircraft. The McDonnell Douglas
F-4 Phantom II is one such example, unique among fighters for having dihedral wingtips. This was added after prototype flight testing (the original prototype of the F-4 had a flat wing) showed the need to correct some unanticipated roll instability - angling the wingtips, which were already designed to fold up for carrier operations, was a far more practical solution than re-engineering the entire wing.
References
http://www.aeroexperiments.org/washoutbillow.shtml
Further Information
Get more info on 'Dihedral'.
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