Influence of three-dimensionality on propulsive flapping

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

A. N. Zurman-Nasution (University of Southampton)

B. Ganapathisubramani (University of Southampton)

G. D. Weymouth (University of Southampton)

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External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2019.1078
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Volume number
886
Article number
A25
Downloads counter
160

Abstract

Propulsive flapping foils are widely studied in the development of swimming and flying animal-like autonomous systems. Numerical studies in this topic are mainly two-dimensional (2-D) studies, as they are quicker and cheaper, but this inhibits the three-dimensional (3-D) evolution of the shed vortices from leading and trailing edges. In this work, we examine the similarities and differences between 2-D and 3-D simulations through a case study in order to evaluate the efficacy and limitations of using 2-D simulations to describe a 3-D system. We simulate an infinite-span NACA0016 foil in both two and three dimensions at a Reynolds number of 5300 and an angle of attack of 10°. The foil is subject to prescribed heaving and pitching kinematics with varying trailing-edge deflection amplitude. Our primary finding is that the flow and forces are effectively 2-D at intermediate amplitude-based Strouhal numbers (, where is the free-stream velocity and is the flapping frequency), for heaving, for pitching and for coupled motion, while 3-D effects dominate outside of these ranges. These 2-D regions begin when the fluid energy induced by the flapping motion overcomes the 3-D vortex shedding found on a stationary foil, and the flow reverts back to 3-D when the strength of the shed vortices overwhelms the stabilising influence of viscous dissipation. These results indicate that 3-D to 2-D transitions or vice versa are a balance between the strength and stability of leading/trailing-edge vortices and the flapping energy. However, 2-D simulations can still be used for flapping flight/swimming studies provided that the flapping amplitude/frequency is within a given range.

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