I think I also jumped
into conclusions and halfway through the thought had already forgotten about your specific idea about an "only outward expanding" diffuser. Sorry about that. To address your basic premise, I think I can't do no better than to quote
"Mulsanne's corner" on diffusers first:
Michael J. Fuller wrote:Understand that a true flat bottomed car (one without a diffuser) will produce downforce in and of itself when run in rake. Essentially the entire flat bottom becomes one large diffuser. It too has two suction peaks, one upon entrance, the second at the trailing edge of the flat undertray. A diffuser acts to enhance this underside suction, it acts like a pump, encouraging better flow under the car.
So in essence, even a simple construction would seem to do and perhaps serve as a sort of a baseline effort: Adding complexity to the design beyond a flat undertray is then up to your enthusiasm. For any diffuser's purpose there would seem to be an optimal ratio of widening the cross-section towards the rear, the full extent of which in your case is perhaps difficult to achieve by horizontal expansion alone. The diffuser won't work properly if its sides curve aggressively enough to separate the flow prematurely, after all. Of course I didn't validate this hunch in any way at all; there's a surprising amount of aero and CFD material online though, and I'm sure many here have such links as you could use tucked away in their favorite links (
as do I but perhaps not in the most efficient form). I certainly hope that you'll attract comments beyond mine anyway.
But, if sidepods are unacceptable and you're only looking at a fairly flat undertray, I'll be as brave as to suggest one more thing for you to investigate: louvers (
of an unspecified scale), such as ALMS prototypes have on their wheel arches for example. In essence, cutting very many small diffusers through the length and width of the plate in one pattern or another instead of one upward swoop at the rear. It could make for one crazily oscillating pressure coefficient compared to a more traditional underbody, but I can imagine it not being the easiest of challenges either the interactions being potentially much more complex.