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To tread or not to tread: comparison between water treading and conventional flapping wing kinematics

To tread or not to tread: comparison between water treading and conventional flapping wing kinematics
To tread or not to tread: comparison between water treading and conventional flapping wing kinematics
Hovering insects are limited by their physiology and need to rotate their wings at the end of each back-and-forth motion to keep the wing's leading edge ahead of its trailing edge. The wing rotation at the end of each half-stroke pushes the leading edge vortex away from the wing which leads to a loss in the lift. Unlike biological fliers, human-engineered flapping wing micro air vehicles have different design limitations. They can be designed to avoid the end of stroke wing rotation and use so-called water-treading flapping kinematics. Flapping wings using conventional flapping kinematics have a designated leading and trailing edge. In the water-treading mode, the role of the leading and trailing edges are continuously alternated throughout the stroke. Here, we compare velocity field and force measurements for a rectangular flapping wing conducting normal hovering and water-treading kinematics to study the difference in fluid dynamic performance between the two types of flapping kinematics. We show that for similar power consumption, the water-treading mode produces more lift than the conventional hovering mode and is 50% more efficient for symmetric pitching kinematics. In the water-treading mode, the leading edge vortex from the previous stroke is not pushed away but is captured and keeps the newly formed leading edge vortex closer to the wing, leading to a more rapid increase of the lift coefficient which is sustained for longer. This makes the water-treading mode a promising alternative for human-engineered flapping wing vehicles.
bio-inspired propulsion, flapping wings, hovering, water-treading
1748-3182
Krishna, Swathi
b8d18885-c9af-4d17-8ddf-cec91e1663c9
Gehrke, Alexander
0aa11a04-9f68-4cea-9422-6a4bf11abf05
Mulleners, Karen
902bd30a-9e57-4877-9bb6-912c844f69d4
Krishna, Swathi
b8d18885-c9af-4d17-8ddf-cec91e1663c9
Gehrke, Alexander
0aa11a04-9f68-4cea-9422-6a4bf11abf05
Mulleners, Karen
902bd30a-9e57-4877-9bb6-912c844f69d4

Krishna, Swathi, Gehrke, Alexander and Mulleners, Karen (2022) To tread or not to tread: comparison between water treading and conventional flapping wing kinematics. Bioinspiration & Biomimetics, 17 (6), [066018]. (doi:10.1088/1748-3190/ac9a1b).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Hovering insects are limited by their physiology and need to rotate their wings at the end of each back-and-forth motion to keep the wing's leading edge ahead of its trailing edge. The wing rotation at the end of each half-stroke pushes the leading edge vortex away from the wing which leads to a loss in the lift. Unlike biological fliers, human-engineered flapping wing micro air vehicles have different design limitations. They can be designed to avoid the end of stroke wing rotation and use so-called water-treading flapping kinematics. Flapping wings using conventional flapping kinematics have a designated leading and trailing edge. In the water-treading mode, the role of the leading and trailing edges are continuously alternated throughout the stroke. Here, we compare velocity field and force measurements for a rectangular flapping wing conducting normal hovering and water-treading kinematics to study the difference in fluid dynamic performance between the two types of flapping kinematics. We show that for similar power consumption, the water-treading mode produces more lift than the conventional hovering mode and is 50% more efficient for symmetric pitching kinematics. In the water-treading mode, the leading edge vortex from the previous stroke is not pushed away but is captured and keeps the newly formed leading edge vortex closer to the wing, leading to a more rapid increase of the lift coefficient which is sustained for longer. This makes the water-treading mode a promising alternative for human-engineered flapping wing vehicles.

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Accepted/In Press date: 13 October 2022
Published date: 1 November 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation under Grant No. 200021_175792. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd.
Keywords: bio-inspired propulsion, flapping wings, hovering, water-treading

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 471602
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471602
ISSN: 1748-3182
PURE UUID: f8b55b1c-d346-4a8b-86cd-bc3f5c1b4d56
ORCID for Swathi Krishna: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4316-7428

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Date deposited: 14 Nov 2022 18:04
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:08

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Author: Swathi Krishna ORCID iD
Author: Alexander Gehrke
Author: Karen Mulleners

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