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Bio-inspired oscillatory foil propulsion has the ability to traverse various propulsive modes by dynamically changing the foils heave and pitch kinematics. This research characterizes the propulsion properties and wake dynamics of a symmetric oscillating foil, specifically targeting the high Reynolds number operation of small to medium surface vessels whose propulsive specifications have a broad range of loads and speeds. An unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (URANS) solver with a k-$omega$ SST turbulence model is used to sweep through pitch amplitude and frequency at two heave amplitudes of $h_0/c=1$ and $h_0/c=2$ at $Re=10^6$. At $h_0/c=2$, the maximum thrust coefficient is $C_T=8.2$ due to the large intercepted flow area of the foil, whereas at a decreased Strouhal number the thrust coefficient decreases and the maximum propulsive efficiency reaches 75%. Results illustrate the kinematics required to transition between the high-efficiency and high-thrust regimes at high Reynolds number and the resulting changes to the vortex wake structure. The unsteady vortex dynamics throughout the heave-pitch cycle strongly influence the characterization of thrust and propulsive efficiency, and are classified into flow regimes based on performance and vortex structure.
In this video, we present the dynamics of an array of falling particles at intermediate Reynolds numbers. The film shows the vorticity plots of 3, 4, 7, 16 falling particles at $Re = 200$. We highlight the effect of parity on the falling configuratio
This paper proposes a new data assimilation method for recovering high fidelity turbulent flow field around airfoil at high Reynolds numbers based on experimental data, which is called Proper Orthogonal Decomposition Inversion (POD-Inversion) data as
We experimentally investigate the effect of geometrical anisotropy for buoyant ellipsoidal particles rising in a still fluid. All other parameters, such as the Galileo number $Ga approx 6000$ and the particle density ratio $Gamma approx 0.53$ are kep
The elementary structures of turbulence, i.e., vortex tubes, are studied using velocity data obtained in laboratory experiments for boundary layers and duct flows at microscale Reynolds numbers 332-1934. While past experimental studies focused on int
An essential ingredient of turbulent flows is the vortex stretching mechanism, which emanates from the non-linear interaction of vorticity and strain-rate tensor and leads to formation of extreme events. We analyze the statistical correlations betwee