The effects of hand configuration on propulsive forces in swimming
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Abstract
During front crawl swimming, water is driven backwards with the limbs. Drag forces generated by the limbs are consequently used for forward propulsion. The hands are responsible for approximately 60% of the generated propulsive forces. Reaching a podium place in competitive swimming is dependent on differences in finishing times smaller than 0.5%. For this reason, investigating the effects of hand configuration on swimming performance is of interest. Configurable properties of the hand are the finger spreading and hand palm cupping. It is argued that a small finger spreading leads to a larger obstruction in the fluid flow compared to closed fingers, resulting in larger generated drag forces. Similarly, a small hand cupping is expected to increase the drag forces in analogy to the drag increase experienced by cupped disks. In this thesis, an experimental investigation is carried out to look into the effects of both finger spreading and hand cupping. Furthermore, CFD simulations are used for the abstract modelling of hands with finger spreading by use of slotted disks.
Towing tank experiments in water are performed to investigate the effects of finger spreading for five full-scale arm models. The research showed that a small finger spreading of 5° can increase the drag coefficient of the hand with 1.7%, in comparison to closed fingers. Larger spreadings were found to influence the drag coefficient disadvantageously, where a 20° finger spreading reduced the drag with 1.5%. The found effects indicate that finishing times can be reduced with 0.3% by using 5° finger spreading instead of 20° spreading.
Wind tunnel experiments are used to look into the effects of hand cupping. Dynamic scaling based on the Reynolds number is used to account for the used air flow. Effects for five full-scale arm models with different hand cuppings were investigated, these have a 5° finger spreading which was found optimal from previous research. It appeared that small rotations around the longitudinal axis of the arm have large influences on the drag coefficient, where a maximum in drag was never found for the hand palm perpendicular to the flow, but with an abducted thumb opposing the flow. The research showed that 6% more drag is generated for a flat hand in comparison to the largest investigated hand cupping. This indicates that finishing times can be reduced with 0.8% by using a flat hand instead of a large hand cupping.
In conclusion, the research found a hand configuration with 5° finger spreading and a flat hand palm optimal for maximizing drag forces. The found effects on finishing times indicate that using this hand configuration can play an important role in reaching podium places during front crawl swimming.