Abstract

In order to break through the speed bottleneck, researchers envision using tubes to cover high-speed maglev trains and extract some of the air inside the tubes, creating a low-density environment on the ground, greatly reducing the aerodynamic drag of the trains, and in a relatively economical and feasible way, making high subsonic (600 km/h and above) and even supersonic ground transportation possible. The faster the running speed of high-speed trains, the greater the impact of aerodynamic drag on their energy consumption. Studying the aerodynamic characteristics of trains with a speed of 600 km/h can help optimize the aerodynamic shape of the train, reduce aerodynamic drag, and reduce energy consumption. This has positive implications for improving train energy efficiency, reducing energy consumption, and environmental impact. This paper adopts the numerical simulation method to study the drag reduction effect of the plasma arrangement and different excitation speeds on the train set in four positions when the incoming wind speed is 600 km/h, to analyze the mechanism of drag reduction, and then to analyze the combination of working conditions in order to investigate the drag reduction effect of plasma on the vacuum tube train set with an ambient pressure of 10,000 Pa. The findings demonstrate that the plasma induces the directional flow of the gas close to the wall to move the flow separation point backward and delay the separation of the flow, thereby reducing the front and rear differential pressure drag of the train set and lowering the aerodynamic drag coefficient of the entire train. The plasma arrangement is located at the rear of the flow separation point and in close proximity to the flow separation point. The pneumatic drag reduction effect peaks when the excitation speed reaches 0.2 times the train speed and the pneumatic drag reduction ratio is around 0.88%; the pneumatic drag reduction ratio of the rear car peaks when the excitation speed reaches 0.25 times the train speed and the pneumatic drag reduction ratio is 1.62%. The SDBD (Surface Dielectric Barrier Discharge) device is installed at the flow separation point around the nose tip of the rear car.

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