Borazjani Iman, Sotiropoulos Fotis
St Anthony Falls Laboratory, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55402, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2008 May;211(Pt 10):1541-58. doi: 10.1242/jeb.015644.
We employ numerical simulation to investigate the hydrodynamics of carangiform locomotion as the relative magnitude of viscous and inertial forces, i.e. the Reynolds number (Re), and the tail-beat frequency, i.e. the Strouhal number (St), are systematically varied. The model fish is a three-dimensional (3D) mackerel-like flexible body undulating with prescribed experimental kinematics of carangiform type. Simulations are carried out for three Re spanning the transitional and inertial flow regimes, Re=300 and 4000 (viscous flow), and infinity (inviscid flow). For each Re there is a critical Strouhal number, St*, at which the net mean force becomes zero, making constant-speed self-propulsion possible. St* is a decreasing function of Re and approaches the range of St at which most carangiform swimmers swim in nature (St approximately 0.25) only as Re approaches infinity. The propulsive efficiency at St* is an increasing function of Re while the power required for swimming is decreasing with Re. For all Re, however, the swimming power is shown to be significantly greater than that required to tow the rigid body at the same speed. We also show that the variation of the total drag and its viscous and form components with St depend on the Re. For Re=300, body undulations increase the drag over the rigid body level, while significant drag reduction is observed for Re=4000. This difference is shown to be due to the fact that at sufficiently high Re the drag force variation with St is dominated by its form component variation, which is reduced by undulatory swimming for St>0.2. Finally, our simulations clarify the 3D structure of various wake patterns observed in experiments--single and double row vortices--and suggest that the wake structure depends primarily on the St. Our numerical findings help elucidate the results of previous experiments with live fish, underscore the importance of scale (Re) effects on the hydrodynamic performance of carangiform swimming, and help explain why in nature this mode of swimming is typically preferred by fast swimmers.
我们采用数值模拟来研究鲹科鱼类游动的流体动力学,其中粘性力和惯性力的相对大小,即雷诺数(Re),以及尾鳍摆动频率,即斯特劳哈尔数(St),是系统变化的。模型鱼是一个三维(3D)类似鲭鱼的柔性物体,以规定的鲹科鱼类类型的实验运动学进行波动。针对跨越过渡流和惯性流区域的三个雷诺数进行了模拟,Re = 300和4000(粘性流),以及无穷大(无粘流)。对于每个雷诺数,都有一个临界斯特劳哈尔数St*,此时净平均力变为零,从而实现等速自推进。St是雷诺数的递减函数,并且只有当雷诺数趋近于无穷大时,才接近大多数鲹科鱼类在自然环境中游泳时的斯特劳哈尔数范围(St约为0.25)。在St时的推进效率是雷诺数的递增函数,而游泳所需的功率则随雷诺数降低。然而,对于所有雷诺数,游泳功率都显著大于以相同速度拖曳刚体所需的功率。我们还表明,总阻力及其粘性和形状分量随St的变化取决于雷诺数。对于Re = 300,身体波动会使阻力超过刚体水平,而对于Re = 4000,则观察到显著的阻力降低。这种差异表明是由于在足够高的雷诺数下,阻力随St的变化主要由其形状分量变化主导,对于St > 0.2,波动游泳会使形状分量减小。最后,我们的模拟阐明了实验中观察到的各种尾流模式的三维结构——单排和双排涡旋——并表明尾流结构主要取决于斯特劳哈尔数。我们的数值研究结果有助于阐明先前对活鱼实验的结果,强调尺度(Re)效应在鲹科鱼类游泳流体动力学性能中的重要性,并有助于解释为什么在自然界中这种游泳模式通常被快速游泳者所青睐。