Nature-inspired three-dimensional surface serration topologies enable silent flight by suppressing airfoil-turbulence interaction noise
As natural predators, owls fly with astonishing stealth due to the sophisticated serrated surface morphology of their feathers that produces advantageous flow characteristics and favorable boundary layer structures. Traditionally, these serrations are tailored for airfoil edges with simple two-dimen...
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Zusammenfassung: | As natural predators, owls fly with astonishing stealth due to the
sophisticated serrated surface morphology of their feathers that produces
advantageous flow characteristics and favorable boundary layer structures.
Traditionally, these serrations are tailored for airfoil edges with simple
two-dimensional patterns, limiting their effect on overall noise reduction
while negotiating tradeoffs in aerodynamic performance. Here, we formulate new
design strategies that can mitigate tradeoffs between noise reduction and
aerodynamic performance by merging owl feather and cicada insect wing
geometries to create a three-dimensional topology that features silent and
efficient flight. Aeroacoustics and aerodynamics experimental results show that
the application of our hybrid topology yields a reduction in overall sound
pressure levels by up to 9.93% and an increase in propulsive efficiency by over
48.14% compared to benchmark designs. Computational fluid dynamics simulations
reveal that the three-dimensional, owl-inspired surface serrations can enhance
surface vorticity. The produced coherent vortex structures serve to suppress
the source strength of dipole and quadrupole pressure sources at various
Reynolds numbers, resulting in a universal noise reduction effect. Our work
demonstrates how a bioinspired three-dimensional serration topology refines the
turbulence-airfoil interaction mode and improves multiple functionalities of an
aerodynamic surface to enable quieter and more fuel-efficient, aerial vehicles. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2308.08788 |