Henri Coandă

For other uses, see Coanda (disambiguation).

Henri Coandă

Henri Coandă at a meeting with Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1967
Born Henri Marie Coandă
(1886-06-07)June 7, 1886
Bucharest
Died November 25, 1972(1972-11-25) (aged 86)
Bucharest
Nationality Romanian
Alma mater Technical University of Berlin
Montefiore Institute
Occupation Engineer, physicist, inventor
Known for Coandă effect, aeronautical engineering
Parent(s) Constantin Coandă (father)
Aida Danet (mother)

Henri Marie Coandă (Romanian pronunciation: [ɑ̃ˈri ˈko̯andə]; 7 June 1886 25 November 1972[1]) was a Romanian inventor, aerodynamics pioneer and builder of an experimental aircraft, the Coandă-1910 described by Coandă in the mid-1950s as the world's first jet,[2] a controversial claim disputed by some and supported by others.[3] He invented a great number of devices, designed a "flying saucer" and discovered the Coandă effect of fluid dynamics.[4]

Life

Early life

Born in Bucharest, Coandă was the second child of a large family. His father was General Constantin Coandă, a mathematics professor at the National School of Bridges and Roads. His mother, Aida Danet, was the daughter of French physician Gustave Danet, and was born in Brittany. He was later to recall that even as a child he was fascinated by the miracle of wind.

Coandă attended Elementary school at the Petrache Poenaru Communal School in Bucharest, then (1896) Began his secondary school career at the Liceu Sf. Sava (Saint Sava National College). After three years (1899), his father, who desired a military career for him, had him transferred to the Military High School in Iaşi where he required four additional years to complete high-school. He graduated in 1903 with the rank of sergeant major, and he continued his studies at the School of Artillery, Military, and Naval Engineering in Bucharest. Sent with an artillery regiment to Germany (1904), he enrolled in the Technische Hochschule in Charlottenburg, Berlin.

Coandă graduated as an artillery officer, but he was more interested in the technical problems of flight. In 1905, he built a missile-aeroplane for the Romanian Army. He continued his studies (1907–08) at the Montefiore Institute in Liège, Belgium, where he met Gianni Caproni. In 1908 Coandă returned to Romania to serve as an active officer in the Second Artillery Regiment. His inventor's spirit did not comport well with military discipline and he obtained permission to leave the army, after which he took advantage of his renewed freedom to take a long automobile trip to Isfahan, Teheran, and Tibet.

Aviation activities in France

Upon his return in 1909, he travelled to Paris, where he enrolled in the newly founded École Nationale Supérieure d'Ingénieurs en Construction Aéronautique (now the École Nationale Supérieure de l'Aéronautique et de l'Espace, also known as SUPAERO). One year later (1910) he graduated at the head of the first class of aeronautical engineers.

Coandă-1910 airplane
Coandă-1910 airplane with the compressor on separate display

In 1910, in the workshop of Gianni Caproni, he designed and built an aircraft known as the Coandă-1910, which he displayed publicly at the second International Aeronautic Salon in Paris that year.[5] The aircraft used a 4-cylinder piston engine to power a rotary compressor which was intended to propel the craft by a combination of suction at the front and airflow out the rear instead of using a propeller.

Contemporary sources describe the Coandă-1910 as incapable of flight.[6] Years later, after others had developed jet technology, Coandă started making claims that it was a motorjet, and that it actually flew.[3] According to Charles Gibbs-Smith: "There was never any idea of injecting fuel; the machine never flew; it was never destroyed on test; and Flight noted that it was sold to a Monsieur Weyman."[2] Gibbs-Smith continued, "The claim said that after a disastrous crash (which never happened) Coandă wished to begin a 'second aircraft', but 'his funds were exhausted.' Within a year he was ... exhibiting (in October 1911) a brand new propeller-driven machine at the Reims Concours Militaire..."[2] Other aviation writers accepted Coandă's story of his flight tests with the Coandă-1910.[7][8]

Coandă's colleague at Huyck Corporation, G. Harry Stine—a rocket scientist, author and "the father of American model rocketry"—stated in his book The Hopeful Future that "there were several jet-propelled aircraft in existence at an early time-the Coandă-1910 jet and the 1938 Caproni Campini N.1, the pure jet aircraft flight was made in Germany in 1938". Rolf Sonnemann and Klaus Krug from the University of Technology of Dresden, mentioned in passing in their 1987 book Technik und Technikwissenschaften in der Geschichte (Technology and Technical Sciences in History) that the Coandă-1910 was the world's first jet.[9]

Between 1911 and 1914, he worked as technical manager of the Bristol Aeroplane Company[1] in the United Kingdom, where he designed several aeroplanes known as the Bristol-Coanda Monoplanes. In 1912 one of these aircraft won a prize at the British Military Aeroplane Competition.

In 1915, he returned to France where, working during World War I for Delaunay-Belleville in Saint-Denis, he designed and built three different models of propeller aeroplane, including the Coandă-1916, with two propellers mounted close to the tail. This design was to be reprised in the 1950s Sud Aviation Caravelle transport aeroplane, for which Coandă was a technical consultant.

In the years between the wars, he continued travelling and inventing. In 1934 he was granted a French patent related to the Coandă Effect. During early 1930 he used the same principle as the basis for the design of a disc-shaped aircraft called Aerodina Lenticulară (lens-shaped aerodyne), a "flying saucer" shaped aircraft that used an unspecified source of high pressure gases to flow through a ring-shaped vent system. In 1936 Coandă applied for a patent for his design.[10] No practical full-scale version was built.

World War II

Coanda spent World War II in occupied France where he worked for the Nazis to help their war effort by developing the turbopropulseur (turbopropeller) drive system from his 1910 biplane into a propulsion system for snow sleds.[11] The German contract concluded after one year, yielding no plans for production. [12]

Later work

Coandă's research on the Coandă Effect was of interest post-war and became the basis for several investigations of entrained or augmented flow.[11] A small stream of a high-velocity fluid could be used to generate a greater mass flow, at lower velocity. Although eventually unsuccessful for aircraft propulsion, this effect has been widely used on a smaller scale, from packaging machinery for small pills through to the Dyson Air Multiplier bladeless fan.

In 1969, during the early years of the Ceauşescu era, he returned to spend his last days in his native Romania, where he served as director of the Institute for Scientific and Technical Creation (INCREST) and in 1971 reorganized, along with professor Elie Carafoli, the Department of Aeronautical Engineering of the Polytechnic University of Bucharest, spinning it off from the Department of Mechanical Engineering.

Coandă died in Bucharest on 25 November 1972 at the age of 86. He is buried at Bellu cemetery.[13]

Honours and awards

Inventions, and discoveries

See also

References

Notes
  1. 1 2 3 Flight 1973
  2. 1 2 3 Flight, 14 October 1960. p. 619.
  3. 1 2 Winter, Frank H. (1980). "Ducted Fan or the World's First Jet Plane? The Coanda claim re-examined". The Aeronautical journal (Royal Aeronautical Society) 84: 408.
  4. Coanda effect. (2013). Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th Edition, 1.
  5. Statiev, Alexander (2002). "Antonescu’s Eagles against Stalin’s Falcons: The Romanian Air Force, 1920–1941". The Journal of Military History 66 (4): 1085. doi:10.2307/3093265. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
  6. Aircraft (1910)Volume 1 page 367.
  7. Houart, Victor (1957). L'Histoire de l'aviation recontée à mon fils (in French). Paris: Casablanca: Société chérisienne de publications et d'éditions. Quoted in F. H. Winter (1980)
  8. NĂSTASE, Adriana (2010). "Homage to Henri Coanda". INCAS Bulletin 2 (4): 17–18. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  9. Sonneman, Rolf; Krug, Klaus (1987). Technik und Technikwissenschaften in der Geschichte. Proceedings of the ICOHTEC-Symposium, International Cooperation in History of Technology Committee 12. Berlin: Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften. p. 37.
  10. US patent 2108652, "Propelling device", published January 15, 1936, issued February 15, 1938
  11. 1 2 "Augmented Flow". Flight 50: 174. 15 August 1946.
  12. "Augmented Flow". Flight: 174. 15 August 1946.
  13. Catillon, Marcel (1997). Mémorial aéronautique: qui était qui? (in French). Nouvelles Editions Latines. pp. 49–50. ISBN 2723305295.
  14. 20 July 1916 Flight
  15. http://storage0.dms.go4it.ro/media/2/84/2031/7281839/4/radar-cover.jpg
  16. http://storage0.dms.go4it.ro/media/2/84/2031/7281839/5/radar-articol.jpg
Bibliography
  • Stine, G.H., "The Rises and Falls of Henri-Marie Coanda", Air & Space Smithsonian, Sept. 1989
  • Dr Henri Coanda Flight International, 13 January 1973 p76

External links

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