Formula SAE vehicles, like many other vehicles within motorsport, often employ rear mounted aerodynamic devices to improve cornering performance, these devices can however have a significant amount of aerodynamic drag. Additional speed can be gained by reducing the impact of the rear wing on the straightaways of the track through the use the aptly named Drag Reduction System (DRS), which works by reducing the angle of attack of the rear wing flap(s).
A DRS can however introduce other performance losses, including the losses from having a gap between the rear wing flaps and endplate to prevent friction, the potential to stall the rear wing from improper opening angles of the flaps, and from the wake of the DRS actuator if positioned in front of the airfoils. An additional concern is the time it takes for the rear wing performance to return upon DRS deactivation, which will affect how long before corner entry the driver must disable the system.
Insight into each of these problems as well as the optimum opening angles was found through the use of CFD using Siemens’ STAR-CCM+ 2019.1. Simplified geometry came from UMSAE Polar Bear Racing’s car, PBR20, out of the University of Manitoba. All steady state simulations were done using RANS, while the DRS deactivation study was done using a novel method using Detached Eddy Simulation (DES), where dynamic overset meshes were used to model the transient motion of the flaps. As a result of the deactivation study, new insight was gained into the dynamic behaviour of drag reduction systems.