Team Design Projects
Materials
Porosity
There are two types of porosity related to parachutes: fabric and geometric porosity. Fabric porosity relates to the inherent permeability of the parachute material. Geometric porosity relates to what percent of the parachute's canopy is "cut out." The equivalent metric between fabric and geometric porosity measures is 27.4 ft3/ft2/min, at 1/2-inch water pressure ≈ 1% geometric porosity (Knacke, 5-71).
Both forms of porosity influence opening forces, drag, and stability by means of the following trends (Knacke, 5-71):
Porosity \uparrow: C_{D} \downarrow, F_{opening} \downarrow, Oscillation \downarrow
Fabrics
The following fabrics are used in parachute fabrication:
Natural Fibers
- silk
- cotton
Man-made fibers
- Kevlar
- Dacron
- Nylon
- Teflon
- Rayon
Resources
T.W. Knacke, Parachute Recovery Systems: Design Manual
Greathouse and Schwing, Study of Geometric Porosity on Static Stability and Drag using Computational Fluid Dynamics for Rigid Parachute Shapes