Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4993138 International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow 2017 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
The phenomenon of insect flight has been of scientific interest for many years and is more recently inspiring modern engineering devices such as Micro Aerial Vehicles (MAVs). Insect flight is characterized by unsteady fluid dynamics at low Reynolds numbers. The importance of viscous effects to the successful flapping flight of insects has been identified and with the current state of computing and Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) these effects can now be studied in detail. The present work attempts to simplify this complex phenomenon by considering symmetric oscillating rotational motion of a wing (pitching). What is of interest in this study is how the shape of a corrugated idealized insect wing affects the performance and flow characteristics around the pitching wing. Two dimensional CFD on an oscillating wing has been performed and reported. Measurements were taken to ensure the accuracy of the computational solution and the results validated against experimental PIV results. A range of frequencies and rotational amplitudes have been investigated. Lift and drag coefficients have been analyzed for all cases to quantify the effects of unsteady flow features on the performance of the oscillating wing. It was found that the wing shape used in this study resulted in the viscous features formed on the top of the wing exhibiting high sensitivity to the oscillating conditions and these influenced the performance of the wing. The flow features formed on the bottom of the wing remained similar throughout the cases tested. In the pitching regime this wing profile did not perform as well as published results for smooth airfoils in terms of thrust and propulsion efficiency. However this may be due to reduced frequency effects becoming important at our high pitching amplitude which need to be investigated further. There may be other oscillatory regimes that more accurately represent flapping flight in which the corrugated foil outperforms a smooth counterpart but these are yet to be investigated. Further research in this area may help answer the question as to how evolutionarily significant other benefits of a corrugated wing, such as being light and strong, are compared to its aerodynamic properties, the present results seem to favor the former.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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