Breaking the Mold: A New Way to School
ORAL
Abstract
A fish can improve its efficiency by swimming near other fish. Studying how neighbor-proximity affects performance leads to a better understanding of fish schools and robot swarms. Due to experimental limitations, vertical offsets between fish neighbors (i.e. offsets along the dorsoventral axis) have received less attention. If the vertically-separated foils are actuated in-phase, they can be placed on the same driveshaft, but out-of-phase actuations are more challenging to reproduce. We present here a new setup that uses horizontal airfoils to enable multi-hydrofoil, vertically separated, out-of-phase motions. We present preliminary force data, optimization tests, and particle image velocimetry (PIV) obtained with our new setup. We compare our results with vertically-separated, in-phase foils actuated with a single driveshaft (Re = 10k – 30k).
*This work is supported by the Office of Naval Research (MURI N00014-22-1-2616, Program Manager: Bob Brizzolara) and the National Science Foundation (Grant #2040351, Program Manager: Ron Joslin)
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Presenters
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Elizabeth A Westfall
- University of Virginia