Special issue: Bioinspired fluid-structure interaction

https://iopscience.iop.org/journal/1748-3190/page/Bioinspired-Fluid-Structure-Interaction

Fluid-structure interaction (FSI) studies the interaction between fluid and solid objects. It helps understand how fluid motion affects solid objects and vice versa. FSI research is important in engineering applications such as aerodynamics, hydrodynamics, and structural analysis. It has been used to design efficient systems such as ships, aircraft, and buildings. FSI in biological systems has gained interest in recent years for understanding how organisms interact with their fluidic environment. Our special issue features papers on various biological and bio-inspired FSI problems.

S. Jung & R. Godoy-Diana
Bioinspiration & biomimetics 18, 030401 (2023)
Editorial article: 10.1088/1748-3190/acc778

Intermittent vs. continuous swimming: An optimization tale

G. Li, D. Kolomenskiy, H. Liu, R. Godoy-Diana & B. Thiria
Physical Review Fluids 8, 013101 (2023)
doi: 10.1103/PhysRevFluids.8.013101
see also in Physics Magazine: Why Fish Swim Intermittently

Intermittent swimming, also termed “burst-and-coast swimming,” has been reported as a strategy for fish to enhance their energetical efficiency. Intermittent swimming involves additional control parameters, which complexifies its understanding by means of quantitative and parametrical analysis, in comparison with continuous swimming. In this study, we used a hybrid computational fluid dynamic (CFD) model to assess the swimming performance in intermittent swimming parametrically and quantitatively. A Navier-Stokes solver is applied to construct a database in the multidimensional space of the control parameters to connect the undulation kinematics to swimming performance. Based on the database, an indirect numerical approach named “gait assembly” is used to generate arbitrary burst-and-coast gaits to explore the parameter space. Our simulations directly measured the hydrodynamics and energetics under the unsteady added-mass effect during burst-and-coast swimming. The results suggest that the instantaneous power of burst is basically determined by undulatory kinematics. The results show that the energetical performance of burst-and-coast swimming can be better than that of continuous swimming, but also that an unoptimized burst-and-coast gait may become very energetically expensive. These results shed light on the mechanisms at play in intermittent swimming, enabling us to better understand fish behavior and to propose design guidelines for fishlike robots.