School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2021 Nov 17;61(5):1608-1618. doi: 10.1093/icb/icab112.
Numerous species of aquatic invertebrates, including crustaceans, swim by oscillating multiple closely spaced appendages. The coordinated, out-of-phase motion of these appendages, known as "metachronal paddling," has been well-established to improve swimming performance relative to synchronous paddling. Invertebrates employing this propulsion strategy cover a wide range of body sizes and shapes, but the ratio of appendage spacing (G) to the appendage length (L) has been reported to lie in a comparatively narrow range of 0.2 < G/L ≤ 0.65. The functional role of G/L on metachronal swimming performance is unknown. We hypothesized that for a given Reynolds number and stroke amplitude, hydrodynamic interactions promoted by metachronal stroke kinematics with small G/L can increase forward swimming speed. We used a dynamically scaled self-propelling robot to comparatively examine swimming performance and wake development of metachronal and synchronous paddling under varying G/L, phase lag, and stroke amplitude. G/L was varied from 0.4 to 1.5, with the expectation that when G/L is large, there should be no performance difference between metachronal and synchronous paddling due to a lack of interaction between vortices that form on the appendages. Metachronal stroking at nonzero phase lag with G/L in the biological range produced faster swimming speeds than synchronous stroking. As G/L increased and as stroke amplitude decreased, the influence of phase lag on the swimming speed of the robot was reduced. For smaller G/L, vortex interactions between adjacent appendages generated a horizontally oriented wake and increased momentum fluxes relative to larger G/L, which contributed to increasing swimming speed. We find that while metachronal motion augments swimming performance for closely spaced appendages (G/L <1), moderately spaced appendages (1.0 ≤ G/L ≤ 1.5) can benefit from the metachronal motion only when the stroke amplitude is large.
许多水生无脊椎动物物种,包括甲壳类动物,通过摆动多个紧密间隔的附肢来游泳。这些附肢的协调、相位不同的运动,即“同步划动”,已经被证明可以提高游泳性能,相对于同步划动。采用这种推进策略的无脊椎动物覆盖了广泛的体型和形状,但附肢间距(G)与附肢长度(L)的比值报告在一个相对较窄的范围内,0.2 < G/L ≤ 0.65。G/L 对同步划动性能的功能作用尚不清楚。我们假设,对于给定的雷诺数和冲程幅度,由小 G/L 的同步划动运动学产生的水动力相互作用可以增加向前游泳速度。我们使用动态比例的自推进机器人来比较研究在不同 G/L、相位滞后和冲程幅度下的同步划动和同步划动的游泳性能和尾流发展。G/L 从 0.4 变化到 1.5,预计当 G/L 较大时,由于附肢上形成的涡之间缺乏相互作用,同步划动和同步划动之间应该没有性能差异。在生物范围内的非零相位滞后下进行的同步划动产生比同步划动更快的游泳速度。随着 G/L 的增加和冲程幅度的减小,相位滞后对机器人游泳速度的影响减小。对于较小的 G/L,相邻附肢之间的涡相互作用产生水平取向的尾流,并增加相对于较大的 G/L 的动量通量,这有助于提高游泳速度。我们发现,虽然对于紧密间隔的附肢(G/L <1),同步运动增强了游泳性能,但对于中等间隔的附肢(1.0 ≤ G/L ≤ 1.5),只有在冲程幅度较大时,同步运动才能受益。