Fluid dynamics of flapping aquatic flight in the bird wrasse:three-dimensional unsteady computations with fin deformation

2002 ◽  
Vol 205 (19) ◽  
pp. 2997-3008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ravi Ramamurti ◽  
William C. Sandberg ◽  
Rainald Löhner ◽  
Jeffrey A. Walker ◽  
Mark W. Westneat

SUMMARY Many fishes that swim with the paired pectoral fins use fin-stroke parameters that produce thrust force from lift in a mechanism of underwater flight. These locomotor mechanisms are of interest to behavioral biologists,biomechanics researchers and engineers. In the present study, we performed the first three-dimensional unsteady computations of fish swimming with oscillating and deforming fins. The objective of these computations was to investigate the fluid dynamics of force production associated with the flapping aquatic flight of the bird wrasse Gomphosus varius. For this computational work, we used the geometry of the wrasse and its pectoral fin,and previously measured fin kinematics, as the starting points for computational investigation of three-dimensional (3-D) unsteady fluid dynamics. We performed a 3-D steady computation and a complete set of 3-D quasisteady computations for a range of pectoral fin positions and surface velocities. An unstructured, grid-based, unsteady Navier—Stokes solver with automatic adaptive remeshing was then used to compute the unsteady flow about the wrasse through several complete cycles of pectoral fin oscillation. The shape deformation of the pectoral fin throughout the oscillation was taken from the experimental kinematics. The pressure distribution on the body of the bird wrasse and its pectoral fins was computed and integrated to give body and fin forces which were decomposed into lift and thrust. The velocity field variation on the surface of the wrasse body, on the pectoral fins and in the near-wake was computed throughout the swimming cycle. We compared our computational results for the steady, quasi-steady and unsteady cases with the experimental data on axial and vertical acceleration obtained from the pectoral fin kinematics experiments. These comparisons show that steady state computations are incapable of describing the fluid dynamics of flapping fins. Quasi-steady state computations, with correct incorporation of the experimental kinematics, are useful when determining trends in force production, but do not provide accurate estimates of the magnitudes of the forces produced. By contrast, unsteady computations about the deforming pectoral fins using experimentally measured fin kinematics were found to give excellent agreement, both in the time history of force production throughout the flapping strokes and in the magnitudes of the generated forces.

2000 ◽  
Vol 203 (15) ◽  
pp. 2261-2278 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.D. Wilga ◽  
G.V. Lauder

The classical theory of locomotion in sharks proposes that shark pectoral fins are oriented to generate lift forces that balance the moment produced by the oscillating heterocercal tail. Accordingly, previous studies of shark locomotion have used fixed-wing aircraft as a model assuming that sharks have similar stability and control mechanisms. However, unlike airplanes, sharks are propelled by undulations of the body and tail and have considerable control of pectoral fin motion. In this paper, we use a new approach to examine the function of the pectoral fins of leopard sharks, Triakis semifasciata, during steady horizontal swimming at speeds of 0.5-2.0ls(−1), where l is total body length, and during vertical maneuvering (rising and sinking) in the water column. The planar orientation of the pectoral fin was measured using three-dimensional kinematics, while fluid flow in the wake of the pectoral fin and forces exerted on the water by the fin were quantified using digital particle image velocimetry (DPIV). Steady horizontal swimming in leopard sharks is characterized by continuous undulations of the body with a positive body tilt to the flow that decreases from a mean of 11 degrees to 0.6 degrees with increasing flow speeds from 0. 5 to 2.0ls(−1). Three-dimensional analysis showed that, during steady horizontal locomotion, the pectoral fins are cambered, concave downwards, at a negative angle of attack that we predict to generate no significant lift. Leopard shark pectoral fins are also oriented at a substantial negative dihedral angle that amplifies roll moments and hence promotes rapid changes in body position. Vortices shed from the trailing edge of the pectoral fin were detected only during vertical maneuvering. Starting vortices are produced when the posterior plane of the pectoral fin is actively flipped upwards or downwards to initiate rising or sinking, respectively, in the water column. The starting vortex produced by the pectoral fin induces a pitching moment that reorients the body relative to the flow. Body and pectoral fin surface angle are altered significantly when leopard sharks change vertical position in the water column. Thus, locomotion in leopard sharks is not analogous to flight in fixed-wing aircraft. Instead, a new force balance for swimming leopard sharks is proposed for steady swimming and maneuvering. Total force balance on the body is adjusted by altering the body angle during steady swimming as well as during vertical maneuvering, while the pectoral fins appear to be critical for initiating maneuvering behaviors, but not for lift production during steady horizontal locomotion.


1999 ◽  
Vol 202 (18) ◽  
pp. 2413-2432 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.D. Wilga ◽  
G.V. Lauder

Pectoral fins are one of the major features of locomotor design in ray-finned fishes and exhibit a well-documented phylogenetic transition from basal to derived clades. In percomorph fishes, the pectoral fins are often used to generate propulsive force via oscillatory movements, and pectoral fin propulsion in this relatively derived clade has been analyzed extensively. However, in the plesiomorphic pectoral fin condition, exemplified by sturgeon, pectoral fins extend laterally from the body in a generally horizontal orientation, have been assumed to generate lift to balance lift forces and moments produced by the heterocercal tail, and are not oscillated to generate propulsive force. The proposal that pectoral fins in fishes such as sturgeon generate lift during horizontal locomotion has never been tested experimentally in freely swimming fishes. In this paper, we examine the function of pectoral fins in sturgeon swimming at speeds from 0.5-3.0 L s(−)(1), where L is total body length. Sturgeon were studied during steady horizontal locomotion as well as while sinking and rising in the water column. Pectoral fin function was quantified using three-dimensional kinematics to measure the orientation of the fin surface, digital particle image velocimetry (DPIV) was used to describe flow in the wake of the fin and to estimate force exerted on the water, and electromyography was used to assess pectoral fin muscle function. Sturgeon (size range 25–32 cm total length) swam horizontally using continuous undulations of the body with a positive body angle that decreased from a mean of 20 degrees at 0.5 L s(−)(1) to 0 degrees at 3.0 L s(−)(1). Both the angle of the body and the pectoral fin surface angle changed significantly when sturgeon moved vertically in the water column. Three-dimensional kinematic analysis showed that during steady horizontal swimming the pectoral fins are oriented with a negative angle of attack predicted to generate no significant lift. This result was confirmed by DPIV analysis of the pectoral fin wake, which only revealed fin vortices, and hence force generation, during maneuvering. The orientation of the pectoral fins estimated by a two-dimensional analysis alone is greatly in error and may have contributed to previous suggestions that the pectoral fins are oriented to generate lift. Combined electromyographic and kinematic data showed that the posterior half of the pectoral fin is actively moved as a flap to reorient the head and body to initiate rising and sinking movements. A new force balance for swimming sturgeon is proposed for steady swimming and vertical maneuvering. During steady locomotion, the pectoral fins generate no lift and the positive body angle to the flow is used both to generate lift and to balance moments around the center of mass. To initiate rising or sinking, the posterior portion of the pectoral fins is actively moved ventrally or dorsally, respectively, initiating a starting vortex that, in turn, induces a pitching moment reorienting the body in the flow. Adjustments to body angle initiated by the pectoral fins serve as the primary means by which moments are balanced.


1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (12) ◽  
pp. 2351-2361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans-Peter Schultze ◽  
Marius Arsenault

Quebecius quebecensis (Whiteaves 1889) is a porolepiform crossopterygian related to Glyptolepis. A large nariodal, a large tabular, a separate intertemporal, and a large fused nasosupraorbital are features of Quebecius that characterize it as a porolepiform. The small size of the operculum, median extrascapular larger than the lateral one, small lower squamosals, and deep maxilla are additional features separating Quebecius from Glyptolepis. As in Glyptolepis, the median fins are not lobed. The pectoral fin possesses a long fleshy lobe. The internal, ventral side of the broadly based pelvic fin suggests that the internal axis has shifted towards the body. Pectoral fins with a long fleshy lobe are a common feature of porolepiforms, but lobed bases in the pelvic and unpaired fins are a feature found in Holoptychius, and not in Glyptolepis and Quebecius. Quebecius quebecensis is conspecific with Quebecius williamsi Schultze 1973, mistakenly described as an onychodont crossopterygian.


2005 ◽  
Vol 49 (02) ◽  
pp. 144-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Kara ◽  
D. Vassalos

The Ship Stability Research Centre, Department of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering, The Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde, Scotland, UKA linearized three-dimensional potential flow formulation in time domain is applied to calculate wave-making resistance of ships in calm water. Steady-state perturbation potentials for resistance are obtained as the steady-state limit of the surge radiation impulse response function using the transient free surface source distribution over the body surface. Five different vessels are used to validate the present numerical approximation. The results, including steady-state wave-making resistance, sinkage force, trim moment, and wave profile along the waterline, are compared with other published numerical and experimental results.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ningyu Li ◽  
Yumin Su

Numerical simulations are carried out to study the fluid dynamics of a complex-shaped low-aspect-ratio pectoral fin that performs the labriform swimming. Simulations of flow around the fin are achieved by a developed immersed boundary (IB) method, in which we have proposed an efficient local flow reconstruction algorithm with enough robustness and a new numerical strategy with excellent adaptability to deal with complex moving boundaries involved in bionic flow simulations. The prescribed fin kinematics in each period consists of the power stroke and the recovery stroke, and the simulations indicate that the former is mainly used to provide the thrust while the latter is mainly used to provide the lift. The fin wake is dominated by a three-dimensional dual-ring vortex wake structure where the partial power-stroke vortex ring is linked to the recovery-stroke ring vertically. Moreover, the connection of force production with the fin kinematics and vortex dynamics is discussed in detail to explore the propulsion mechanism. We also conduct a parametric study to understand how the vortex topology and hydrodynamic characteristics change with key parameters. The results show that there is an optimal phase angle and Strouhal number for this complicated fin. Furthermore, the implications for the design of a bioinspired pectoral fin are discussed based on the quantitative hydrodynamic analysis.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian L. Smith

Abstract The paper describes three-dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) calculations undertaken in support of analyses of steam/air mixing which takes place in the drywell volumes of the 1/40th-scale ESBWR1 mock-up facility PANDA under conditions of symmetric steam/air injection and asymmetric outflow. Steady-state simulations for pure steam conditions illustrate how the flow streams mix to ensure balanced outflow conditions to the condensers. A transient calculation has also been performed to examine how air released from solution in the PANDA boiler would ultimately accumulate in the separate condenser units. Results provide a possible explanation for the rundown in performance of one of the condensers which was repeatedly observed in some of the PANDA tests.


1993 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 238-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qi Liu ◽  
James G. Hay ◽  
James G. Andrews

The purpose of this study was to determine the influence of (a) body roll, and (b) the motion of the arm relative to the trunk, on the medial-lateral component of the path followed by the hand during the pull phase in freestyle swimming. Ten male swimmers swam three trials of freestyle at a long-distance workout pace. Three-dimensional (3D) underwater videography was used to record the body roll angle-time history and the path followed by the hand during the pull phase. A mathematical model was used to characterize the motion of a swimmer's right upper limb in accord with 3D data from the videotape images, and to determine what the path of the hand would have been as a result of body roll alone. The contribution of body roll to the actual handpath was found to be nearly equal to the contribution of medial-lateral motions of the hand relative to the trunk.


2013 ◽  
Vol 831 ◽  
pp. 90-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Aryan ◽  
M. Ghassemieh

Vertical seismic excitation has a tremendous effect on bridges and many researchers have pointed out bridges damages occurred during the past significant earthquakes which were direct results of ignoring vertical acceleration of ground motions. Many studies have emphasized the importance of extending practical methods to reduce effects of vertical acceleration of earthquakes besides effects of horizontal accelerations; but no practical method has proposed up to now. In this article, an innovative shape memory alloy system is proposed for bridges that can simultaneously controls effects of vertical and horizontal seismic excitations on bridge and reduce them. To evaluate the effectiveness of the shape memory alloy system, a nonlinear time history analysis is conducted on a detailed three-dimensional model of a multi-span simply supported bridge using a representative ground motion. The results show that the proposed new system is very effective for reducing effects of vertical and horizontal seismic excitations on bridges.


2010 ◽  
Vol 645 ◽  
pp. 345-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. DONG ◽  
M. BOZKURTTAS ◽  
R. MITTAL ◽  
P. MADDEN ◽  
G. V. LAUDER

Numerical simulations are used to investigate the flow associated with a bluegill sunfish (Lepomis macrochirus) pectoral fin during steady forward motion. The simulations are intended to match the experiments of Lauder et al. (Bioinsp. Biomim., vol. 1, 2006, p. S25), and the results obtained from the simulations complement the experimental analysis. The focus of the current paper is on the quantitative characterization of the propulsive performance of the pectoral fin, which undergoes significant deformation during its stroke. This includes a detailed analysis of the thrust production mechanisms as well as their connection to the vortex dynamics and other flow features. The simulations indicate that the fish fin produces high propulsive performance by employing a complex fin gait driven by active and passive fin deformation. By connecting the vortex dynamics and fin kinematics with the surface distribution of the force on the fin, it is found that during abduction, the fin moves such that the tip of the fin undergoes a complex, three-dimensional flapping motion that produces a strong and long-lasting, attached tip vortex. This tip vortex is associated with most of the thrust production during the abduction phase of the stroke. During the adduction phase, the fin motion is similar to a ‘paddling’ stroke. Comparisons are made with rigid flapping foils to provide insights into the remarkable performance of the fish fin and to interpret the force production from the viewpoint of functional morphology.


2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (52) ◽  
pp. 15940-15945 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tetsuya Nakamura ◽  
Jeff Klomp ◽  
Joyce Pieretti ◽  
Igor Schneider ◽  
Andrew R. Gehrke ◽  
...  

Extreme novelties in the shape and size of paired fins are exemplified by extinct and extant cartilaginous and bony fishes. Pectoral fins of skates and rays, such as the little skate (Batoid, Leucoraja erinacea), show a strikingly unique morphology where the pectoral fin extends anteriorly to ultimately fuse with the head. This results in a morphology that essentially surrounds the body and is associated with the evolution of novel swimming mechanisms in the group. In an approach that extends from RNA sequencing to in situ hybridization to functional assays, we show that anterior and posterior portions of the pectoral fin have different genetic underpinnings: canonical genes of appendage development control posterior fin development via an apical ectodermal ridge (AER), whereas an alternative Homeobox (Hox)–Fibroblast growth factor (Fgf)–Wingless type MMTV integration site family (Wnt) genetic module in the anterior region creates an AER-like structure that drives anterior fin expansion. Finally, we show that GLI family zinc finger 3 (Gli3), which is an anterior repressor of tetrapod digits, is expressed in the posterior half of the pectoral fin of skate, shark, and zebrafish but in the anterior side of the pelvic fin. Taken together, these data point to both highly derived and deeply ancestral patterns of gene expression in skate pectoral fins, shedding light on the molecular mechanisms behind the evolution of novel fin morphologies.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document