Petiolate wings: effects on the leading-edge vortex in flapping flight
收藏DataONE2020-06-24 更新2025-06-28 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:68d7e1d807135c94eee38d43c44482cb246901b47a13c3db092c07bea27f8cd8
下载链接
链接失效反馈资源简介:
The wings of many insect species including crane flies and damselflies are petiolate (on stalks), with the wing planform beginning some distance away from the wing hinge, rather than at the hinge. The aerodynamic impact of flapping petiolate wings is relatively unknown, particularly on the formation of the lift-augmenting leading-edge vortex (LEV): a key flow structure exploited by many insects, birds and bats to enhance their lift coefficient. We investigated the aerodynamic implications of petiolation P using particle image velocimetry flow field measurements on an array of rectangular wings of aspect ratio 3 and petiolation values of P = 1â3. The wings were driven using a mechanical device, the âFlapperatusâ, to produce highly repeatable insect-like kinematics. The wings maintained a constant Reynolds number of 1400 and dimensionless stroke amplitude Î* (number of chords traversed by the wingtip) of 6.5 across all test cases. Our results showed that for more petiolate wings the LEV i...
创建时间:
2025-05-27



