Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T12:53:15.785Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Experimental wind-tunnel study of the dynamics of inverted foils for energy harvesting

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 June 2023

M. Flores Salinas
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de recherche en commande active, avionique et aéroservoélasticité, École de Technologie Supérieure, Montréal, Québec, Canada
R.M. Botez*
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de recherche en commande active, avionique et aéroservoélasticité, École de Technologie Supérieure, Montréal, Québec, Canada
M. Tavallaeinejad
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada
M.P. Païdoussis
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada
*
Corresponding author: R. M. Botez; Email: ruxandra@gpa.etsmtl.ca
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This paper describes the methodology used to analyse oscillations of foils of a wide range of aspect ratios, 0.5 ≤ AR ≤ 4, and Reynolds numbers, 104 ≤ Re ≤ 105, for energy harvesting purposes. The foils were fixed at their trailing edge, and their dynamical behaviour was captured as the wind speed was varied. The foil response was then analysed as a function of velocity, Reynolds number, oscillation amplitude and frequency. Additionally, the forces and moments acting on the foils were measured, utilising an aerodynamic scale, designed and built in-house. An empirical power generation equation was derived to determine the foil characteristics for maximum energy harvesting production. The results show that a flexible foil with AR = 3 with oscillations in the large-amplitude regime is the most effective for energy harvesting.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal Aeronautical Society

Nomenclature

A

oscillation amplitude

AR

foil aspect ratio

B

deflection rigidity

d

dimensionless amplitude

E

Young’s modulus

f

vortex shedding frequency

${F_x}$ , ${F_y}$

foil force components

H, L, h

foil height, length, thickness

Kb

bending stiffness ratio

LE

foil leading edge

${\raise0.7ex\hbox{$l$} \!\mathord{\left/ {\vphantom {l L}}\right.}\!\lower0.7ex\hbox{$L$}}$

foil dimensionless deflection

${\raise0.7ex\hbox{${\Delta l}$} \!\mathord{\left/ {\vphantom {{\Delta l} L}}\right.}\!\lower0.7ex\hbox{$L$}}$

dimensionless tip deflection

${M_x}$ , ${M_y}$

foil moment components

TE

foil trailing edge

$\bar P$

power extracted

${P_t}$

fluid total pressure

${P_s}$

fluid static pressure

${q_c}$

fluid dynamic pressure

PDF

probability density function

PSD

power spectral density

Re

Reynolds number

St

Strouhal number

U

flow velocity

$\mu$

mass ratio

ν

kinematic viscosity

νp

Poisson’s ratio

ρ s

foil density

ρ f

fluid density, air density

w(L, t)

foil displacement

$\dot w$ (L, t)

foil velocity

1.0 Introduction

Renewable energy production that can function for extended periods of time and reduce the need for batteries is of major concern in the modern world [Reference Matlock, Warwick, Sharikov, Richards and Suleman1Reference Afonso, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Lau and Suleman3]. A great deal of effort has been expended towards developing self-powered devices that can capture energy from oscillating foils and convert it into energy [Reference Alam, Chao, Rehman, Ji and Wang4Reference Dunnmon, Stanton, Mann and Dowell6]. A flexible foil immersed in a fluid flow can experience self-induced periodic oscillations at various flow velocities. The oscillation of foils is of interest not only because of its occurrence in nature, but also because it can generate great amounts of clean renewable energy, even with relatively small-sized foils [Reference Rostami and Armandei7Reference Machado, Matlock and Suleman9].

In this research, we consider cantilevered foils exclusively, with a clamped trailing edge (TE), a free leading edge (LE) and no other support elsewhere. This configuration is referred to as the “inverted foil configuration”. The flow direction is parallel to the rest position of the foil, and is presumed to be uniform and steady, as shown in Fig. 1. The 2D representation shows the length (L) and height (H) of the foil and the mean flow speed U direction.

Analytical and experimental studies on conventional plates in axial flow were performed by Guo and Païdoussis [Reference Guo and Païdoussis10] who employed inviscid potential flow theory to predict the onset of oscillatory instability. They were the first to conclude that the plates oscillate at critical velocities inversely proportional to their mass ratio.

In 2013, the first experimental investigation on inverted foil flapping was conducted by Kim et al. [Reference Kim, Cossé, Huertas Cerdeira and Gharib11] who identified three flow regimes, namely, with the foil straight, undergoing large-amplitude flapping and fully deflected. Additionally, they reported that the foil mass ratio has little effect on the onset of large-amplitude flapping.

In a 2016 study by Sader et al. [Reference Sader, Huertas-Cerdeira and Gharib12], it was found that two key parameters of the dynamics of inverted foils are the foil’s length (L) and height (H). For foils, where L is at least 10 times H, they found that foils do not flap, but they go from the straight mode (a) to the fully deflected mode (f) shown in Fig. 2. Additional dynamical states have been identified in that and subsequent studies [Reference Sader, Huertas-Cerdeira and Gharib12Reference Tavallaeinejad, Païdoussis, Flores Salinas, Legrand, Kheiri and Botez15] as a function of flow velocity and foil aspect ratio. For sufficiently large aspect ratio, as shown in Fig. 2, the foil (a) is straight, (b) is buckled, undergoes (c) small-amplitude asymmetric flapping, (d) large-amplitude flapping, (e) aperiodic or chaotic flapping and (f) becomes fully deflected.

In this paper, we analyse the dynamics of inverted foils over a wide range of foil aspect ratios, 0.5 ≤ AR ≤ 4, in the Reynolds number regime of 104 ≤ Re ≤ 105, in well-defined and controlled experimental tests. The inverted foil configuration was chosen in this research because: (i) inverted foils are more susceptible to instabilities at various flow conditions and can exhibit more flapping modes; (ii) an inverted foil configuration can produce energy several times larger than a conventional-foil configuration for the same foil size [Reference Yu, Liu and Chen16Reference Hu, Tang, Das and Marzocca19].

As stated earlier, the overall motivation for this research is to investigate the dynamics of inverted foils as an efficient energy harvesting system. This method of renewable energy production requires fluid kinetic energy to be transferred to the foil (as strain energy), and then the strain energy to be converted into energy with an “energy generator mechanism” that will rotate a motor shaft. The “energy generator mechanism” design and validation is part of a future study by the present authors. The Power $\bar P$ extracted from the “energy generator mechanism” is equivalent to the extracted energy from foil oscillations. As there is no actuation system, the input energy is null, and thus the net energy extracted is always guaranteed to be positive. The extracted energy from an oscillating foil can be determined using the empirical equation of Mitcheson et al. [Reference Mitcheson, Yeatman, Rao, Holmes and Green20],

(1) \begin{align} \overline{P}{\rm{\;}} \approx A\;{\rm{S}}{{\rm{t}}^3}.\end{align}

where $\bar P$ is the extracted power, A is the oscillation amplitude, and St is the Strouhal number.

Figure 1. Physical parameters of an inverted foil configuration.

Figure 2. Experimental measurement of a foil clamped at the trailing edge (inverted foil configuration) in axial flow. The direction of the flow is from right to left, as shown by the arrow. The foil is black and its recorded path is grey. The foil dynamics shows the followings modes: (a) straight, (b) buckled, (c) small-amplitude asymmetric flapping, (d) large-amplitude flapping, (e) aperiodic or chaotic flapping and (f) fully deflected state. Data collected and image produced in Matlab version 9.0 (R2016a).

The research objectives in this paper are the following.

  1. (1) Investigate the effects of foil length and height (aspect ratio), flapping frequency, flapping regime, Strouhal number, Reynolds number and foil peak-to-peak amplitude.

  2. (2) Analyse the characteristics of inverted foils for power generation.

  3. (3) Analyse the forces acting on inverted foils for a better understanding of foil dynamics and power generation.

2.0 Definitions of dimensionless parameters

We consider a foil of length L, height H, density ρ s , thickness h, in fluid flow of density ρ f and flow velocity U. The aspect ratio AR, mass ratio $\mu$ , and Reynolds number are defined by Kim et al. [Reference Kim, Cossé, Huertas Cerdeira and Gharib11]

(2) \begin{align} {\rm{AR}}\; = \;\frac{H}{L},\,\mu = \;\frac{{{\rho _f}\;L}}{{{\rho _s}\;h}},\,{\rm{Re}} = \frac{{U{\rm{\;}}L}}{\nu },\end{align}

where $\nu $ is the fluid kinematic viscosity.

A dimensionless amplitude of oscillation is defined by Kim et al. [Reference Kim, Cossé, Huertas Cerdeira and Gharib11]

(3) \begin{align} d\; = \;\frac{A}{L}\;,\end{align}

where A is the maximum peak-to-peak amplitude.

We also define a parameter Kb as defined by Kim et al. [Reference Kim, Cossé, Huertas Cerdeira and Gharib11]

Bending stiffness Kb is the ratio of the deflection rigidity B of the foil and the fluid inertia, as shown by Equation (4a). The fluid inertia is defined by the fluid density $\rho f$ , with a specific flow velocity U and foil length L, as shown in Fig. (4b). The deflection rigidity B, which is the force required to bend a flexible foil, it is defined by the Young’s modulus E, the thickness of the foil h, and the Poisson’ ratio of the foil material defined by the variable ν. deflection rigidity B is calculated as shown by Equation (4c).

(4a) \begin{align} Kb{\rm{\;}} = {\rm{\;}}\frac{{{\rm{Deflection\;rigidity\;}}}}{{{\rm{Fluid\;inertia}}}}\end{align}
(4b) \begin{align} Kb\; = \;\frac{B}{{\rho f\;{U^2}\;{L^3}}}\end{align}
(4c) \begin{align} \;B\; = \;\frac{{E\;{h^3}}}{{12\!\left( {1 - \;{{\rm{\nu }}^2}} \right)}}\end{align}

Also, presuming that vortex shedding from the deformed upstream end of the foil occurs, we define the Strouhal number as shown in Equation (5) from the work of Mitcheson et al. [Reference Mitcheson, Yeatman, Rao, Holmes and Green20]

(5) \begin{align} {\rm{St\;}} = {\rm{\;}}\frac{{fA}}{U},\end{align}

where f is the vortex shedding frequency in Hz.

3.0 Apparatus and instrumentation

The experimental tests were performed in the Price-Païdoussis (P-P) subsonic wind tunnel of the Research Laboratory in Active Controls, Avionics and Aeroservoelasticity (LARCASE). New methodologies in the aeronautical field have been developed at the LARCASE, including computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model validations with experimental results from subsonic wind tunnel tests [Reference Grigorie, Botez and Popov21Reference Communier, Salinas, Carranza Moyao and Botez30].

The properties of the inverted foils, the novel design of the aerodynamics scale, the P-P wind tunnel, as well as the real-time data acquisition system and instrumentation used in this research are described in this section.

3.1 Foil properties

Foils made of various metal and plastic materials were tested in the wind tunnel. Brass foils were found to give asymmetric oscillation and undergo permanent deformation. Zinc foils were found to have a high material damping and could not flap at all. Stainless steel and propylene foils had other problems [Reference Tavallaeinejad, Païdoussis, Salinas, Legrand, Kheiri and Botez13]. Polycarbonate foils were found to behave best, and they were chosen for the experiments to be described. Table 1 lists the properties and dimensions of the foils used.

Table 1. Material and geometric properties of the foils tested in the wind tunnel

Figure 3. Inverted foil aerodynamic scale for forces and moments measurements: (a) side view; (b) left view.

Figure 4. Price-Païdoussis Wind Tunnel schematic.

3.2 Experimental setup

For the study and analysis of foil dynamics in the inverted foil configuration, a novel design was developed in-house of an aerodynamic scale for measuring forces and moments, along the three axes oriented parallel and perpendicular to the foil’s surface and parallel to the foil’s height. The parts of this aerodynamic scale are illustrated in Fig. 3. The novel clamping screw mechanism uses 27 flat-head screws and 2 symmetrical NACA 0012 aerofoils to support the inverted foil at the trailing edge, without obstructing the flow. An important characteristic of this design is that the clamping screw mechanism and the strain gauge sensors are mechanically aligned and joined together with a coupling mechanism which allows all forces and moments on the foil’s surface to be transmitted to the aerodynamic scale. This unique clamping and coupling mechanism makes it possible to measure and record the foil’s displacement (by a high-speed camera), and to simultaneously measure and record the forces and moments acting on the foil. The aerodynamic scale has a measured drag coefficient of only ${C_d}$ = 0.008 for an angle-of-attack $\textrm{AoA} = 0^{\circ}$ .

For each flow speed, the foil displacement, forces and moments were recorded simultaneously. The interface plate allows for positioning the aerodynamic scale inside the test-section without interfering with the incoming flow. The foil’s clamping and the coupling mechanism were machined from high strength aluminum alloy 606. This aerodynamic scale can measure Fx, Fy and Fz forces of up to 290N and moments Mx, My and Mz of up to 10N m, with a full-scale accuracy of 1/8N and 1/19N m, respectively. The output signals, of the measured forces and moments on all three axes, were amplified, filtered, and sent to the data acquisition system for recording and treatment.

3.3 Wind tunnel

The Price-Païdoussis open-return subsonic wind tunnel consists of a centrifugal fan, a diffusing and settling chamber, a contraction section, and a test-chamber or test section, as shown in Fig. 4. The air enters the wind tunnel by two inlets located on opposite sides of the centrifugal fan. The engine and the centrifugal fan are located in the mechanical room, and they are protected from dust particles by filters in an enclosed area. The main parameters to characterise the flow during wind tunnel tests are: (i) the total, static and dynamic pressures; (ii) the temperature variation during the test; (iii) the controlled flow speed; and (iv) the Reynolds number. The turbulence reduction air filters with honeycomb cell shape and squared cell shape (black dashed lines) can be seen in the settling chamber in Fig. 4; their main function is dissipating and reducing the flow turbulence to a value below 1% [Reference Barlow, Rae and Pope31]. The experiments took place in the test-section with height × width × length of 0.62 × 0.91 × 1.83m.

The flow velocity in the test-section was determined by a Pitot tube. The mean flow speed $U$ was determined for a temperature of 22°C and using the air density ${\rho _f}$ and the difference between the total pressure ${P_t}$ and the static pressure ${P_s}$ , as stated in Equation (6) [Reference Barlow, Rae and Pope31]:

(6) \begin{align} \;{P_{t{\rm{\;}}}} - {\rm{\;}}{P_s}{\rm{\;}} = {\rm{\;}}{q_c}{\rm{\;}} = {\rm{\;}}\frac{1}{2}{\rm{\;}}{\rho _f}{U^2}{\rm{\;}}.\end{align}

Figure 5 shows an inverted foil in the wind tunnel setup for the experiments. The foil trailing edge TE was fixed, and the leading-edge LE was free.

Figure 5. Side view of an inverted foil configuration mounted in a wind tunnel.

3.4 High-speed camera

Measurements were made using a FLIR Systems high-speed camera. This camera has a global shutter, minimising “blur effects” on moving objects. It operates at 163fps at a maximum resolution of 1,920 × 1,200 pixels; the exposure time range can vary between 0.005ms to 31.98s [32]. This exposure time range is sufficient to capture approximately 16 frames for a typical cycle of foil flapping. A fixed focal length lens was set on the image sensor. The camera system enables multiple points painted at the leading edge of the foils to be traced. These points help to determine the foil’s displacement in real-time. A MATLAB image-processing script was developed in-house for extracting the displacements of the foils from the video images. The leading edge slope of the foil was determined, using a linear fit. A point at the leading edge of the foil was used to determine the foil’s transverse and longitudinal deflections. The length of each foil at rest was used as the reference image for calibration.

3.5 Data acquisition system

A multifunction data acquisition system (DAS) from National Instruments (NI), USB-6210, was chosen to convert the analog signals of the aerodynamic scale into digital data, and to save the post-processed data. The USB-6210 allows measurements of up to 16 analog inputs and does not require external power for its functioning. A video was recorded for each flow speed, from 5.0 to 18.4m/s with an increment of 0.2m/s, to capture the foil’s displacement. The high resolution and high frequency video signals were also sent to the data acquisition system for data treatment and post-processing. This data acquisition system made it possible to record the signal from the aerodynamic scale and the video signal simultaneously and in real-time. The sampling rate was 300Hz for the foil’s displacement videos and 1,000Hz for the forces and moments.

The data collected from the videos, as well as the forces and moments, were imported with a hardware timing resolution of 50ns [33] using an in-house MATLAB script (version 9.0-2016b) for the analysis in the post-processing phase.

4.0 Results

In this section, a combination of empirical analysis and wind tunnel measurements is used to establish the relation between foil dynamics and energy production [Reference Poirel and Mendes34, Reference Poirel, Harris and Benaissa35]. The time history of tip displacement recorded during the wind tunnel tests, the displacement at a specific flow speed (probability density function), the dominant frequencies (power spectral density) and the phase-plane portrait are used to analyse the foil dynamics.

There are three regimes of dynamic behaviour for a foil with AR < 0.1: (i) stretched-straight, (ii) flapping and (iii) fully deflected, as observed by Sader et al. [Reference Sader, Huertas-Cerdeira and Gharib12]. For foils with AR ≥ 0.2, the recent work of Tavallaeinejad et al. [Reference Tavallaeinejad, Salinas, Païdoussis, Legrand, Kheiri and Botez36] has identified three other regimes, for a total of six possible foil dynamical states. In this paper, we use the regimes identified in [Reference Tavallaeinejad, Salinas, Païdoussis, Legrand, Kheiri and Botez36] to classify foil deflection at different flow speeds.

  1. (i) The stretched-straight regime with small vibrations superimposed

  2. (ii) The buckled regime, involving a small mean deflection with small-amplitude random-like vibrations superimposed

  3. (iii) The small-amplitude regime with coherent, periodic oscillations around the deflected equilibrium

  4. (iv) The large-amplitude flapping regime

  5. (v) The aperiodic (chaotic) regime with intermittent flapping around the origin and to one side

  6. (vi) The fully deflected regime

The next sub-sections present the experimental data, analyse the inverted foil deflections, describe the inverted foil’s dynamics regimes and analyse the forces produced by the inverted foils.

Figure 6. Time history (a) and PDF (b) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 5.0m/s.

Figure 7. Time history (a) and PDF (b) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 7.0m/s.

4.1 Oscillations of the AR = 1 inverted foil

The first experimental data presented are those of the square-shaped foil (AR = 1), with H = L = 150mm. This foil will be the reference foil, utilised to assess if a more slender or a wider foil is better suited for energy harvesting.

At very low airflow speeds, between 5.0 and 7.0m/s, the foil stays in a stable undeformed equilibrium, parallel to the incoming flow without any oscillation, as shown in Figs. 6(a) and 7(a). The quasi-Gaussian form of the probability density function (PDF) plots suggests small random oscillations, induced by turbulence and unsteadiness of the incoming flow, as shown in Figs. 6(b) and 7(b).

Increasing the flow speed in the wind tunnel test chamber to 7.5 and 7.9m/s causes the AR = 1 foil to buckle slightly and exhibit random oscillations with small amplitudes. As shown in Fig. 8(a), the tip displacement time history is very small, and the probability density function shows a small oscillation between 0.055L and 0.065L for U = 7.9m/s in Fig. 8(b).

Figure 8. Time history (a) and PDF (b) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 7.9m/s.

Increasing the wind speed to 8.1m/s, the foil started flapping abruptly, with an amplitude of 0.8L and a frequency of 4.75Hz, as seen in Fig. 9(a) and (d). The double mast and convex shape of the probability density function and the single-loop response of the phase-plane portrait indicate a periodic oscillation of the foil, as shown in Fig. 9(b) and (c), respectively.

Figure 9. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 8.1m/s.

For flow speeds ranging from 8.5 to 10.5m/s, the flapping transverse amplitude reached 0.8L, with a flapping frequency decreasing from 4.85 to 4.6Hz (refer to Figs. 10 and 11). The phase-plane plots show that the large-amplitude flapping is predominantly periodic, as does the classical double-masted shape of the PDFs, with a transition to a damped behaviour of the foil deflections, as the flow speed increases.

Figure 10. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 9.1m/s.

Figure 11. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 11.0m/s.

As the air flow speed is increased to 11.0m/s, the transverse deflection response of the inverted foil shows an interesting feature with double peaks, marked by a dotted circle in Fig. 11. The double peaks can be detected in the time history and probability density function of Figs. 11(a) and (b). These double peak responses indicate that the foil undergoes extremely large-amplitude bending with the tip slope going beyond 90 degrees. As a result, the transverse deflection displays local minima. This indicates that the flapping amplitude continues to increase as the wind speed increases as shown in Fig. 11(c). In Fig. 11(d), the frequency domain (power spectral density plot) shows higher harmonics contributing to the system response.

For the flow speed range of 12.0 ≤ U ≤ 13.5m/s, the oscillation frequency is reduced from 4.25 to 3.8Hz. Figure 12 shows the chaotic regime characteristics (tip displacement, PDF, phase-plane and power spectral density) of the AR = 1 foil for U = 13m/s.

Figure 12. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 13.0m/s.

For flow speed higher than 13m/s (as seen on Fig. 13, for 14m/s), the two peaks at the edge of the foil oscillation have increased in size and the oscillation is no longer periodic; the inverted foil is considered in a chaotic regime. Sader et al. [Reference Sader, Huertas-Cerdeira and Gharib12] were among the first to identify the chaotic regime of an inverted foil. The definition given was “when the foil transitions from a periodic, large-amplitude flapping regime to an aperiodic flapping regime, it is considered a chaotic regime”.

Figure 13. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 14.0m/s.

It can be noted in Fig. 13(a)–(d) for U = 14m/s, while the flapping amplitude is still ∼0.8L, the dominant frequency of the inverted foil’s oscillation decreases to 3.575Hz and the phase-plane no longer shows a periodic shape. At the flow speed critical value higher than 14.0m/s, the foil displays a one-sided deflected shape, showing the fully deflected regime identified by Kim et al. [Reference Kim, Cossé, Huertas Cerdeira and Gharib11], and any oscillation will cease suddenly.

4.2 Dynamic regimes of AR = 1 inverted foil

Figure 14 shows the various transitions in dynamical state that the AR = 1 inverted foil undergoes are: (a) quasi-static state with very low amplitude oscillation (less than 0.1L, where L is the foil length) for U<8.0m/s corresponding to Re < 8 × 104; (b) flapping, with amplitude 0.85L for U>8.0m/s; (iii) cessation of flapping at U $ \approx $ 14.0m/s.

Figure 14. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for the AR = 1 foil.

A more refined classification of these dynamical states is given as follows: (i) totally static, (ii)–(iii) quasi-static with small oscillations; (iii)–(iv) asymmetric flapping; (iv)–(v) large amplitude flapping; beyond (v) cessation of flapping. In the range 13.0m/s <U< 14.0m/s, the oscillation is aperiodic (chaotic), with the flapping occurring more often on one side than on the other.

The Strouhal number (St) variation with the U for the inverted AR = 1 foil is provided in Fig. 15. A non-zero St occurs once oscillation (flapping) takes place. With increasing flow velocity, St decreases from St = 0.140 to St = 0.063.

Figure 15. Strouhal number of function of flow velocity for the AR = 1 foil.

4.3 Oscillations of the AR < 1 inverted foils

The phase-plane and PSD diagrams of a foil of AR = 0.5 are shown in Fig. 16.

Figure 16. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 0.50 foil for U = 9.8m/s; (c,d) for U = 10.0m/s; (e,f) for U = 16.7m/s; and (g,h) for U = 18.5m/s.

For U = 9.8m/s, the foil undergoes small oscillations as seen in Fig. 16(a) and (b), then it exhibits large-amplitude oscillations for U = 10.0m/s in Fig. 16(c) and (d), aperiodic oscillations for U = 16.7m/s in Fig. 16(e) and (f) and chaotic oscillations for U = 18.5m/s in Fig. 16(g) and (h).

The corresponding results for a foil of AR = 0.75 are shown in Fig. 17.

Figure 17. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 0.75 foil for U = 9.8m/s; (c,d) for U = 11.6m/s; (e,f) for U = 17.1m/s; and (g,h) for U = 18.8m/s.

For U = 9.8m/s, as seen in Fig. 17(a) and (b), the foil undergoes small oscillations. At U = 11.6m/s, as seen in Fig. 17(c) and (d), the large-amplitude regime is observed with a single-loop in the phase-plane diagram and a dominant frequency of 5.2Hz in the power spectral density (PSD) diagram. At U = 17.1m/s, as seen in Fig. 17(e) and (f), the foil oscillations are irregular with a reduced and not well defined (not prominent) flapping frequency of $ \approx $ 2Hz. At U = 18.8m/s, as seen in Fig. 17(g) and (h), the foil fully deflects to one side and ceases oscillating.

4.4 Oscillations of the AR > 1 inverted foils

In this section, we explore the dynamic regimes of foils whose heights are two, three and four times their lengths, AR = 2, AR = 3 and AR = 4, respectively.

Figure 18 shows the experimental data and different oscillation regimes obtained for the AR = 2 foil for three flow speeds U = 8.0, 8.78 and 16.6m/s. Small-amplitude oscillations around the zero (neutral) position can be seen in Fig. 18(a) and (b) for U = 8.0m/s. Large-amplitude oscillations, with a well-defined “single-loop” phase–plane shape and a dominant frequency of 5.3Hz are seen in Fig. 18(c) and (d) for U = 8.78m/s. The ill-defined shapes on the phase-plane and the absence of a dominant frequency are signs of a chaotic regime, as observed in Fig. 18(e) and (f) for U = 16.6m/s.

Figure 18. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 2 foil for U = 8.0m/s; (c,d) for U = 8.7m/s; and (e,f) for U = 16.6m/s.

At a flow speed U of 7.1 m/s, the AR = 3 foil starts showing small-amplitude oscillations behaviour, as seen in Fig. 19(a) and (b). As soon as the flow speed reaches 7.6m/s, the large-amplitude oscillations start showing a very well-defined phase-plane shape and a dominant frequency of 5.2Hz, as seen in Fig. 19(c) and (d). Then, a chaotic regime follows at U = 16.2m/s, as seen in Fig. 19(e) and (f).

Figure 19. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 3 foil for U = 7.1m/s; (c,d) for U = 7.6m/s; and (e,f) for U = 16.2m/s.

The last foil tested had an aspect ratio AR = 4. The small-amplitude oscillations and the phase-plane shapes are not periodic with a dominant frequency of 2.7Hz for U = 7.0m/s is not well-defined, as observed in Fig. 20(a) and (b). At a flow speed of 9.0m/s, the single-loop phase-plane shape and the dominant frequency of 5.7Hz are signs of a periodic oscillation, as seen in Fig. 20(c) and (d). At and above U = 15.9m/s, the signs of chaotic oscillations are clearly seen: the phase-plane is no longer defined by a single loop, and a dominant frequency is absent, as seen in Fig. 20(e) and (f). Therefore, the AR = 4 foil periodic regime ranges from 9.0 to 15.9m/s, which is a wide range of flow speeds, and it is promising for energy harvesting.

Figure 20. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 4 foil for U = 7.0m/s; (c,d) for U = 9.0m/s; and (e,f) for U = 15.9m/s.

4.5 Dynamic regimes of the 0.5 ≤ AR ≤ 4 inverted foils

The bifurcations of Poincaré maps allow the six regimes identified previously to be observed in a single graph for each foil size [Reference Poirel and Price37]. Figure 21 shows the six possible regimes encountered by the AR = 0.50 foil as a function of the flow speed. The large-amplitude regime is wide before the foil’s surface fully deflects.

Figure 21. Bifurcations of Poincaré points for AR = 0.50 foil.

The bifurcation diagram for the AR = 0.75 foil, shown in Fig. 22, presents well-defined regimes, with a fully deflected foil after a flow value of 18m/s.

Figure 22. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for AR = 0.75 foil.

For the two foils with AR = 0.5 and AR = 0.75, the small-amplitude regime was around $ \approx $ 10.0 m/s, but for AR = 1, the foil passes suddenly from a straight position to full-amplitude oscillations. (This figure is not shown for brevity.)

The regimes for AR = 2, AR = 3 and AR = 4 foils are presented in the bifurcations shown in Figs. 23, 24 and 25, respectively. We can observe that, with increasing AR, the critical wind speed at which the large amplitude regime initiates, is diminished. The critical flow speed for foils with AR>1 is smaller than ∼8m/s, which is significantly different from that for AR = 0.5 and AR = 0.75 (that is larger than 10m/s). Another interesting feature observed is that for the foils with AR = 0.5 and 0.75 the chaotic regime lasts longer. Thus, for larger foils (AR > 1), the foil transitions fairly quickly from a large-amplitude regime to a fully deflected regime.

Figure 23. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for AR = 2 foil.

Figure 24. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for AR = 3 foil.

Figure 25. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for AR = 4 foil.

4.6. Forces and moments for 0.5 ≤ AR ≤ 4 inverted foils

The aerodynamic scale designed for the experiments enabled us to measure the forces and moments of six polycarbonate foils with aspect ratios in the range 0.50 ≤ AR ≤ 4 and with a mass ratio µ = 0.15.

The foil with aspect ratio AR = 0.5 can produce forces up to 8 Newtons during the large-amplitude regime in the flow regime Re = 1.1 × 105.

The force and moment measurements for the transition between the straight regime and the large-amplitude regime can be observed in Figs. 26, 27, 28 and 29. For the AR = 0.75 foil, the force produced was much higher, as it increased to Fx = 35N and Fy = 38.5N in the large-amplitude regime range. Figure 26 shows how the forces and moments increase fairly quickly as soon as the foil starts flapping.

Figure 26. Forces Fx and Fy and moments Mx and My for the AR = 0.75 foil for a Reynolds flow range 4.9 × 104 ≤ Re ≤ 1.1 × 105.

Figure 27. Forces Fx and Fy for the AR = 2 foil for a Reynolds flow range 7.9 × 104 ≤ Re ≤ 1.6 × 105.

Figure 28. Forces Fx and Fy for the AR = 3 foil for a Reynolds flow range 4.9 × 104 ≤ Re ≤ 7.5 × 104.

Figure 29. Forces Fx and Fy for the AR = 4 foil for a Reynolds flow range 4.9 × 104 ≤ Re ≤ 8.9 × 104.

For a foil with an AR of 1, the forces Fx and Fy produced are close to 60N for the whole large-amplitude regime, and seem to be synchronised. The forces and moments develop gradually as the foil transitions from the stretched-straight regime to the large-amplitude regime.

The transition from the straight regime to the large-amplitude regime observed in Fig. 23 for an AR = 2 foil can be also observed in the graph of forces Fx and Fy shown in Fig. 27. For this foil, the forces and moments did not increase considerably, but remained very close to those of the AR = 1 foil, 40N for Fx and 3.5Nm and 3.0Nm for the moments Mx and My, respectively. The force Fy for AR = 2 foil was lower than that of the AR = 1 foil.

The AR = 3 foil developed the largest forces and moments among all six foils; as the foil reached the large-amplitude regime, the forces measured were Fx $ \approx $ 125N and Fy $ \approx $ 65N and the moments were Mx $ \approx $ 9Nm and My $ \approx $ 8Nm. This foil produced the largest forces during the large-amplitude regime, until it reached the fully deflected regime. Figure 28 shows the high forces produced by the oscillation of this flexible foil.

The last foil with AR = 4, exhibits smaller forces Fx and Fy and moments compared to the AR = 3 foil in the large-amplitude regime. Figure 29 shows that the AR = 4 foil does not produce constant forces. For the large-magnitude regimes of AR = 3 and AR = 4 foils, even if the foil deflection displays a full amplitude of 0.8L, the maximum numerical values forces Fx produced by the AR = 4 foil are 56% less than the Fx forces produced by the smaller AR = 3 foil. (Calculation: Table 3: AR = 3 foil, Fx = 125N and AR = 4 foil, Fx = 70N; 125N × 56% is equal to 70 N. For the AR = 4 foil, Fx is 56% of Fx of the AR = 3 foil.)

4.7 Power and force generation

We examined the effects of Re and AR on the flapping regimes, and particularly on the Fx and Fy force generation, as these forces are very important to maximise energy harvesting. It was observed, when calculating the power output $\bar P$ , that a large-amplitude regime, high oscillation frequency and a Strouhal number of 0.14 maximised the energy production of the foil.

The work on harvested energy performed by Mitcheson [Reference Mitcheson, Yeatman, Rao, Holmes and Green20] applied to inverted foils shows that the harvested power $\bar P$ is proportional to the amplitude times the cube of the frequency, as shown in Equation (1). The amplitude corresponds to the tip displacement of the foil, and the frequency of vibration of a blunt body is given by the Strouhal number. Thus, large amplitude with a high Strouhal number would increase the output power. The output power calculated for each foil is presented in Table 2.

The energy harvesting performance of six foils in the inverted foil configuration was analysed. The inverted foil with AR = 3 is best for maximising energy harvesting production, because: (i) the inverted foil configuration oscillates over a relatively large range of flow speeds, providing sustained power generation over a large wind speed range, as seen in Table 2; (ii) it can produce up to 1.06mW of output power, which is the second-highest amount of power generated by the six foils tested. The AR = 4 foil displays spanwise motion which can lead to a deterioration of the energy generation capability of the foil.

Table 3 shows the forces (Fx, Fy) and moments (Mx, My) generated by the six inverted-foils during the large-amplitude regime. Large-amplitude flapping with a constant frequency is the most effective condition to produce large quantities of force from flexible foils in the inverted foil configuration. The AR = 3 foil is optimal for force and moment generation, as obtained experimentally and shown in Table 3.

The results discussed in this section show that the inverted-foil is capable of power generation over a wide range of flow regimes under realistic wind environments. The main characteristics of flapping of an inverted foil are: (i) the flapping regimes occur over a wide range of flow velocities, which makes them suitable for wind energy harvesting in realistic wind conditions with fluctuating flow speeds, as shown in Table 3; (ii) the peak-to-peak amplitude is large, leading to a high magnitude of stress on the surface of the foil, and therefore to a high output of energy production, as shown in Table 2.

It should be mentioned that using a foil configuration and a clamping mechanism different from the one presented in this study (Fig. 3), could affect greatly the foil’s energy generation performance.

Table 2. Power generation as function of inverted-foil aspect ratio

Table 3. Frequencies, forces Fx, Fy and moments Mx, My generation in terms of foil AR and fluid velocity during large-amplitude regime

5.0 Conclusion

In this article, we presented experimental results for flexible foils of different aspect ratio for the purpose of optimising energy harvesting. We presented the foils’ experimental data in Poincaré bifurcation diagrams, in which the variation of the foil’s displacement was shown as a function of increased flow speeds. In addition, the forces and moments at the foil’s surface, the time-histories, probability density functions (PDF), phase-plane portraits and power spectral density (PSD) plots were presented for different Reynolds numbers to help understanding the foil’s dynamics for energy harvesting purposes. This paper also investigated the evolution of the flapping instability as a function of some pertinent parameters, including flow speed, flapping frequency, Reynolds number, aspect ratio, bending rigidity and force production.

We investigated the energy harvesting capabilities of flexible foils in the inverted-foil configuration. More specifically, we focused on a wide range of foil sizes, 0.5 ≤ AR ≤ 4, at high Reynolds number regimes of 104 ≤ Re ≤ 105 in well-defined and controlled experimental tests. Through a series of wind tunnel tests, we studied the range of wind speed in which the flapping instability occurs. Additionally, we showed that the power generation capability of inverted foils increases with AR, and tends to converge to a certain value. Then, we identified the optimum AR foil for sufficient power generation with predominantly chordwise motion. Moreover, the present study allowed us to characterise the foil regimes, detect the critical flow speed to maximise energy harvesting performance, and measure, in real-time, the generated flapping forces and moments. The measurements suggest that foils with aspect ratio equal to 3, in the inverted-foil configuration, seem to be viable candidates for producing clean and renewable energy via small remote devices.

Credit authorship contribution statement

Manuel Flores Salinas: investigation, experimental tests, analysis, writing original draft. Ruxandra M. Botez: supervision, review and editing. Mohammad Tavallaeinejad: investigation, experimental tests, review. Michael P. Païdoussis: supervision, review and editing.

Declaration of competing interest

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to express their thanks to Dr Michael Païdoussis and Dr Stuart Price for the donation of the Price-Païdoussis Open Return Subsonic Wind Tunnel at the LARCASE research laboratory at École de technologie supérieure. The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC).

Supplementary material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/aer.2023.46.

References

Matlock, J., Warwick, S., Sharikov, P., Richards, J. and Suleman, A. Evaluation of energy efficient propulsion technologies for unmanned aerial vehicles, Trans. Can. Soc. Mech. 2019 Jun 4; 43, (4), pp 481489.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stockbridge, C. and CerutiMarzocca, A.P. Airship research and development in the areas of design, structures, dynamics and energy systems, IJASS, 2012, 13, (2), pp 170187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Afonso, F., Ferreira, A., Ribeiro, I., Lau, F. and Suleman, A. On the design of environmentally sustainable aircraft for urban air mobility, Transp. Res. D Transp. Environ. 2021 Feb 1, 91, pp 102688.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alam, M.M., Chao, L.M., Rehman, S., Ji, C. and Wang, H. Energy harvesting from passive oscillation of inverted foil, Phys. Fluids, 2021 Jul 15, 33, (7), p 075111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, J. and Smits, A. Energy harvesting EEL, J. Fluids Struct., 2001, 15, pp 629640.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunnmon, J.A., Stanton, S.C., Mann, B.P. and Dowell, E.H. Power extraction from aeroelastic limit cycle oscillations, J. Fluids Struct., 2011 Nov 1, 27, (8), pp 11821198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rostami, A.B. and Armandei, M. Renewable energy harvesting by vortex-induced motions: Review and benchmarking of technologies, Renew. Sustain. Energy Rev., 2017 Apr 1, 70, pp 193214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nabavi, S. and Zhang, L. Portable wind energy harvesters for low-power applications: A survey, Sensors, 2016 Jul, 16, (7), p 1101.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Machado, L., Matlock, J. and Suleman, A. Experimental evaluation of a hybrid electric propulsion system for small UAVs, Aircr. Eng. Aerosp. Technol., 2019 Dec 2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guo, C.Q. and Païdoussis, M.P. Stability of rectangular plates with free side-edges in two-dimensional inviscid channel flow, J. Appl. Mech., 2000 Mar 1, 67, (1), pp 171176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, D., Cossé, J., Huertas Cerdeira, C. and Gharib, M. Flapping dynamics of an inverted foil, J. Fluid Mech., 2013, p 736.Google Scholar
Sader, J.E., Huertas-Cerdeira, C. and Gharib, M. Stability of slender inverted flags and rods in uniform steady flow, J. Fluid Mech., 2016, 809, pp 873894.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tavallaeinejad, M., Païdoussis, M., Salinas, M.F., Legrand, M., Kheiri, M. and Botez, R.M. Why inverted foils flap: An experimental study, In Proceedings of 2nd International Symposium on Flutter and Its Application. Paris, France 2020, May, pp 217226.Google Scholar
Tavallaeinejad, M., Païdoussis, M., Legrand, M. and Kheiri, M. Instability and the post-critical behaviour of two-dimensional inverted foils in axial flow, J. Fluid Mech., 2020, 890, p A14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tavallaeinejad, M., Païdoussis, M., Flores Salinas, M., Legrand, M., Kheiri, M. and Botez, R. Flapping of heavy inverted foils: A fluid-elastic instability, J. Fluid Mech., 2020, 904, p R5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yu, Y., Liu, Y. and Chen, Y. Vortex dynamics behind a self-oscillating inverted flag placed in a channel flow: Time-resolved particle image velocimetry measurements, Phys. Fluids, 2017 Dec 20, 29, (12), p 125104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhao, W., Païdoussis, M.P., Tang, L., Liu, M. and Jiang, J. Theoretical and experimental investigations of the dynamics of cantilevered flexible plates subjected to axial flow, J. Sound Vib., 2012, 331, (3), pp 575587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, D., Gu, C., Zhang, R., Liu, J., Guo, D. and Marzocca, P. Vortex-induced vibrations of two degrees-of-freedom sprung cylinder with a rotational nonlinear energy sink: A numerical investigation. J. Comput. Nonlinear Dyn., 2021 Jul 1, 16, (7).Google Scholar
Hu, G., Tang, L., Das, R. and Marzocca, P. A two-degree-of-freedom piezoelectric energy harvester with stoppers for achieving enhanced performance, Int. J. Mech. Sci., 2018 Dec 1, 149, pp 500507.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitcheson, P.D., Yeatman, E.M., Rao, G.K., Holmes, A.S. and Green, T.C. Energy harvesting from human and machine motion for wireless electronic devices, Proc. IEEE, Sep. 2008, 96, (9), pp 14571486.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grigorie, L.T., Botez, R.M. and Popov, A.V. How the airfoil shape of a morphing wing is actuated and controlled in a smart way, J. Aerosp Eng., 2015, 28, p 04014043.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koreanschi, A., Sugar Gabor, O. and Botez, R.M. Drag optimization of a wing equipped with a morphing upper surface, Aeronaut. J., 2016, 120, pp 473493.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tchatchueng Kammegne, M.J., Grigorie, L.T., Botez, R.M. and Koreanschi, A. Design and wind tunnel experimental validation of a controlled new rotary actuation system for a morphing wing application. Proc. Inst. Mech. Eng. Part G. J. Aerosp. Eng., 2016, 230, pp 132145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sugar Gabor, O., Koreanschi, A. and Botez, R.M. Optimization of an unmanned aerial system wing using a flexible skin morphing wing, SAE International Journal of Aerospace, 2013, 6, 115121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Botez, R.M. Morphing wing, UAV and aircraft multidisciplinary studies at the Laboratory of applied research in active controls, avionics and aeroservoelasticity LARCASE, Aerospace Lab. ONERA, 2018, 14, (2), pp 114.Google Scholar
Sugar Gabor, O., Koreanschi, A. and Botez, R.M. Analysis of UAS-S4 Éhecatl aerodynamic performance improvement using several configurations of a morphing wing technology, Aeronaut. J., 2016, 120, pp 13371364.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koreanschi, A., Sugar-Gabor, O., and Botez, R.M. Numerical and experimental validation of a morphed wing geometry using Price-Païdoussis wind tunnel testing. Aeronaut. J., 2016, 120, pp 757795.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salinas, M.F., Botez, R.M. and Gauthier, G. New numerical and measurements flow analyses near radars, J. Appl. Mech., 2021, 2, pp 303330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mosbah, A.B., Salinas, M.F., Botez, R.M. and Dao, T.M. New methodology for wind tunnel calibration using neural networks-EGD approach, SAE Int. J. Aerosp., 2013, 6, (2), pp 761766.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Communier, D., Salinas, M.F., Carranza Moyao, O. and Botez, R.M. Aero-structural modeling of a wing using CATIA V5 and XFLR5 software and experimental validation using the Price-Païdoussis wing tunnel. In AIAA Atmospheric Flight Mechanics Conference, 2015, pp 2558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barlow, J.B., Rae, W.H. and Pope, A. Low-speed Wind Tunnel Testing, 3rd ed. John Wiley and Sons, New York, USA, 1999.Google Scholar
Technical information of the FLIR camera. Available online: https://www.flir.ca/products/grasshopper3-gige/ (accessed on Saturday, March 18, 2023).Google Scholar
USB6210 Data Acquisition Card Module manual. Available online: https://www.ni.com/pdf/manuals/375194d.pdf (accessed on Monday, October 18, 2021).Google Scholar
Poirel, D. and Mendes, F. Experimental small-amplitude self-sustained pitch–heave oscillations at transitional Reynolds numbers, AIAA, 2014 Aug, 52, (8), pp 15811590.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poirel, D., Harris, Y. and Benaissa, A.M. Aeroelastic dynamics of a NACA 0012 airfoil in the transitional Reynolds number regime, ASME PVP, 2006 Jan 1, 47888, pp 847854.Google Scholar
Tavallaeinejad, M., Salinas, M.F., Païdoussis, M.P., Legrand, M., Kheiri, M. and Botez, R.M. Dynamics of inverted foils: Experiments and comparison with theory, J. Fluids Struct., 2021, 101, p 103199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poirel, D. and Price, S.J. Bifurcation characteristics of a two-dimensional structurally non-linear airfoil in turbulent flow, Nonlinear Dyn. 2007 Jun, 48, (4), pp 423435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Physical parameters of an inverted foil configuration.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Experimental measurement of a foil clamped at the trailing edge (inverted foil configuration) in axial flow. The direction of the flow is from right to left, as shown by the arrow. The foil is black and its recorded path is grey. The foil dynamics shows the followings modes: (a) straight, (b) buckled, (c) small-amplitude asymmetric flapping, (d) large-amplitude flapping, (e) aperiodic or chaotic flapping and (f) fully deflected state. Data collected and image produced in Matlab version 9.0 (R2016a).

Figure 2

Table 1. Material and geometric properties of the foils tested in the wind tunnel

Figure 3

Figure 3. Inverted foil aerodynamic scale for forces and moments measurements: (a) side view; (b) left view.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Price-Païdoussis Wind Tunnel schematic.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Side view of an inverted foil configuration mounted in a wind tunnel.

Figure 6

Figure 6. Time history (a) and PDF (b) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 5.0m/s.

Figure 7

Figure 7. Time history (a) and PDF (b) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 7.0m/s.

Figure 8

Figure 8. Time history (a) and PDF (b) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 7.9m/s.

Figure 9

Figure 9. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 8.1m/s.

Figure 10

Figure 10. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 9.1m/s.

Figure 11

Figure 11. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 11.0m/s.

Figure 12

Figure 12. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 13.0m/s.

Figure 13

Figure 13. Time history (a), PDF (b), phase-plane (c) and frequency (d) of the tip displacement of AR = 1 foil for U = 14.0m/s.

Figure 14

Figure 14. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for the AR = 1 foil.

Figure 15

Figure 15. Strouhal number of function of flow velocity for the AR = 1 foil.

Figure 16

Figure 16. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 0.50 foil for U = 9.8m/s; (c,d) for U = 10.0m/s; (e,f) for U = 16.7m/s; and (g,h) for U = 18.5m/s.

Figure 17

Figure 17. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 0.75 foil for U = 9.8m/s; (c,d) for U = 11.6m/s; (e,f) for U = 17.1m/s; and (g,h) for U = 18.8m/s.

Figure 18

Figure 18. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 2 foil for U = 8.0m/s; (c,d) for U = 8.7m/s; and (e,f) for U = 16.6m/s.

Figure 19

Figure 19. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 3 foil for U = 7.1m/s; (c,d) for U = 7.6m/s; and (e,f) for U = 16.2m/s.

Figure 20

Figure 20. (a,b) Phase-plane and frequency of AR = 4 foil for U = 7.0m/s; (c,d) for U = 9.0m/s; and (e,f) for U = 15.9m/s.

Figure 21

Figure 21. Bifurcations of Poincaré points for AR = 0.50 foil.

Figure 22

Figure 22. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for AR = 0.75 foil.

Figure 23

Figure 23. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for AR = 2 foil.

Figure 24

Figure 24. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for AR = 3 foil.

Figure 25

Figure 25. Bifurcation of Poincaré points for AR = 4 foil.

Figure 26

Figure 26. Forces Fx and Fy and moments Mx and My for the AR = 0.75 foil for a Reynolds flow range 4.9 × 104 ≤ Re ≤ 1.1 × 105.

Figure 27

Figure 27. Forces Fx and Fy for the AR = 2 foil for a Reynolds flow range 7.9 × 104 ≤ Re ≤ 1.6 × 105.

Figure 28

Figure 28. Forces Fx and Fy for the AR = 3 foil for a Reynolds flow range 4.9 × 104 ≤ Re ≤ 7.5 × 104.

Figure 29

Figure 29. Forces Fx and Fy for the AR = 4 foil for a Reynolds flow range 4.9 × 104 ≤ Re ≤ 8.9 × 104.

Figure 30

Table 2. Power generation as function of inverted-foil aspect ratio

Figure 31

Table 3. Frequencies, forces Fx, Fy and moments Mx, My generation in terms of foil AR and fluid velocity during large-amplitude regime

Supplementary material: PDF

Flores Salinas et al. supplementary material

Flores Salinas et al. supplementary material

Download Flores Salinas et al. supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 2.5 MB