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Effects of uniform vertical inflow perturbations on the performance of flapping wings
Author(s) -
Soudeh Mazharmanesh,
Jace Stallard,
Albert Medina,
Alex Fisher,
Noriyasu Ando,
Fang-Bao Tian,
John Young,
Sridhar Ravi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.210471
Subject(s) - flapping , inflow , lift (data mining) , reynolds number , algorithm , computer science , mechanics , physics , machine learning , wing , thermodynamics , turbulence
Flapping wings have attracted significant interest for use in miniature unmanned flying vehicles. Although numerous studies have investigated the performance of flapping wings under quiescent conditions, effects of freestream disturbances on their performance remain under-explored. In this study, we experimentally investigated the effects of uniform vertical inflows on flapping wings using a Reynolds-scaled apparatus operating in water at Reynolds number ≈ 3600. The overall lift and drag produced by a flapping wing were measured by varying the magnitude of inflow perturbation from J Vert = −1 (downward inflow) to J Vert = 1 (upward inflow), where J Vert is the ratio of the inflow velocity to the wing's velocity. The interaction between flapping wing and downward-oriented inflows resulted in a steady linear reduction in mean lift and drag coefficients,C ¯ LandC ¯ D , with increasing inflow magnitude. While a steady linear increase inC ¯ LandC ¯ Dwas noted for upward-oriented inflows between 0 < J Vert < 0.3 and J Vert > 0.7, a significant unsteady wing–wake interaction occurred when 0.3 ≤ J Vert < 0.7, which caused large variations in instantaneous forces over the wing and led to a reduction in mean performance. These findings highlight asymmetrical effects of vertically oriented perturbations on the performance of flapping wings and pave the way for development of suitable control strategies.

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