1. Introduction
A pulsed jet is characterized by the ejection of the finite volume of a fluid with a high momentum into the surroundings, which is widely utilized in nature and industry. Underwater animals such as cephalopods and salps use pulsed jets through their funnels for locomotion (O'Dor, Pörtner & Shadwick Reference O'Dor, Pörtner and Shadwick1990; Staaf, Gilly & Denny Reference Staaf, Gilly and Denny2014; Bujard, Giorgio-Serchi & Weymouth Reference Bujard, Giorgio-Serchi and Weymouth2021), and archerfish use them to catch terrestrial insects (Gerullis & Schuster Reference Gerullis and Schuster2014). The bombard beetle rapidly ejects a hot fluid jet generated by a chemical reaction towards predators, as a type of defence mechanism (Arndt et al. Reference Arndt, Moore, Lee and Ortiz2015). In industry, pulsed jets are used to clean the filtration or inject fuel into the reaction chamber of a gasoline engine (Shim, Joe & Park Reference Shim, Joe and Park2017). Recently, the pulsed-jet reactor for biofuel was actively studied because of its high efficiency, simple design and robust operation (Schott et al. Reference Schott, Baumbach, Straub, Thorwarth and Vogt2022).
The rich physics related to the pulsed jet has led to active investigations. The hydrodynamics of a pulsed jet can be characterized by the impulse and jet entrainment, which depend on the nozzle geometry, working fluid (e.g. multiphase flow), jet condition (e.g. acceleration time), and so on. The increase rate of the jet impulse is the sum of the jet momentum (${\sim }\rho _{f}v^{2}A$, where $\rho _f$, $v$ and $A$ denote the fluid density, jet velocity and area at the nozzle exit, respectively) and the jet-exit pressure (${\sim }(p-p_{\infty })A=\Delta p\,A$, where $p$ and $p_{\infty }$ correspond to the fluid pressures at the exit and remote location, respectively) (Krueger & Gharib Reference Krueger and Gharib2003; Krieg & Mohseni Reference Krieg and Mohseni2013). The jet momentum depends only on the piston motion when the nozzle and piston are rigid; however, the exit pressure ($p$) can vary according to the jet-vortex dynamics (Gao et al. Reference Gao, Wang, Simon and Chyu2020; Limbourg & Nedić Reference Limbourg and Nedić2021). For example, the formation of a primary vortex ring and the subsequent reinforcement of the jet (contributed by $\Delta p$) from a rigid cylindrical nozzle can be maximized when the formation number $F$ ($= L_{p}/D_{p}$, where $L_p$ and $D_p$ represent the stroke and diameter of the piston, respectively) is ${\sim }$3–4 (Gharib, Rambod & Shariff Reference Gharib, Rambod and Shariff1998; Krueger & Gharib Reference Krueger and Gharib2003). Krieg & Mohseni (Reference Krieg and Mohseni2013) showed that radial flow near the nozzle exit increases the contribution of $\Delta p$ to the jet impulse, thereby resulting in a 70–75 % increment. The enhanced impulse is associated with the faster jet acceleration because of the larger added-mass effect attributed to the entrainment near the jet exit (Gao et al. Reference Gao, Wang, Simon and Chyu2020). As an attempt to control the dynamics of the jet vortices, Dabiri & Gharib (Reference Dabiri and Gharib2005) showed that the closing and opening of the nozzle exit during jet ejection can increase vortex circulation by up to $35\,\%$ (and the jet entrainment up to $5\,\%$).
Recently, given the increasing interest for soft materials, a universal optimal flexibility condition for maximizing the thrust of a continuous jet, which enabled achieving more than a $100\,\%$ increase in the hydrodynamic impulse compared to the rigid counterpart, was reported (Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2022). Although previous investigations tended to simply conclude that jet flow is accelerated with a flexible nozzle (Dabiri & Gharib Reference Dabiri and Gharib2005; Das, Govardhan & Arakeri Reference Das, Govardhan and Arakeri2018), the quantified criterion is meaningful to design nozzle flexibility based on the flow conditions. The augment of impulse by the flexible nozzle is directly associated with the nozzle–jet interaction, i.e. fluid–structure interaction. The nozzle expands because of the positive pressure generated from the moving piston when the flow inside the nozzle starts to accelerate, and this appears as the expansion wave propagating along the nozzle. The wave bounces back when it reaches the nozzle exit, from which nozzle contraction begins. The time scale for this nozzle deformation (time required for the expansion and contraction waves to travel) is determined by the wave speed (i.e. flexibility) and nozzle length. Choi & Park (Reference Choi and Park2022) suggested that the jet impulse is maximized when this time scale is tuned with the jet acceleration time, for maximizing the jet velocity.
This analysis was validated for the continuous jet, i.e. the flow is accelerated continuously inside the nozzle. In contrast, for the pulsed-jet condition, the flow inside the nozzle should decelerate abruptly, producing a negative pressure inside the nozzle and inducing a corresponding contraction wave moving on the nozzle surface. Assisted by this nozzle deformation, the pulsed jet can probably induce additional fluid motion, thereby affecting jet characteristics such as impulse and entrainment. Additionally, the characteristics of the jet flows (e.g. dynamics of jet vortices) related to the thrust or entrainment of the jet are considerably different based on the formation number (Gharib et al. Reference Gharib, Rambod and Shariff1998). Therefore, in this study, we investigate the fluid–structure interaction between the flexible nozzle and pulsed jet in terms of the resulting hydrodynamic impulse and jet entrainment. The validity of the optimal flexibility condition derived for the maximum thrust of the continuous jet (Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2022) is examined, and the underlying physics is discussed.
2. Experimental set-up and procedure
We used the same flow facility to create a pulsed jet and employ the measurement technique used in the previous study (details can be found in Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2022). The pulsed jet is generated by the piston–motor system through the nozzle and fed into a water tank ($300 \times 300 \times 700\ {\rm mm}^3$; figure 1a). The $50$ mm diameter piston pressurizes the water inside the cylindrical nozzle, actuated by a linear guide and a $40$ W motor (ELDM6020, LeadShine). The motor driver (ELD5-400, LeadShine) controls the piston motion to precisely accomplish the desired history of jet-exit velocity ($v_e$) (see the supplementary material and movies, available at https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2024.720, for the repeatability test of the present jet generator). The centre of the undeformed nozzle exit is designated as the origin. Keeping the piston stroke the same, i.e. the volume of displaced water ($V_p$), three pulsed-jet velocity profiles are generated by controlling both the speed and the response time of the motor (figure 1d). In the figure, the effective acceleration time of the pulsed jet is defined as $\varPi _{0}=v_{m,r}T_{acc}/L$ (Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2022). For $\varPi _{0}<1.0$ ($T_{acc}< L/v_{m,r}$), which is the case for the present conditions, the transient behaviour of the flexible nozzle is more dominant. The jet acceleration time ($T_{acc}$), defined as the time when $v_e$ reaches the maximum value ($v_{m,r}$) for the rigid nozzle, varies as $0.05\unicode{x2013}0.16$ s, and the Reynolds number ($Re = v_{m,r}D/\nu$, where $D$ and $\nu$ denote the inner nozzle diameter and the kinematic viscosity of water, respectively) is in the range 1500–4500.
The flexible nozzle is a $30$ mm long hollow circular cylinder made of transparent elastomer (SortaClear 40A, SmoothOn) with inner diameter $15$ mm. The detailed manufacturing process is explained in Choi & Park (Reference Choi and Park2022). The structural stiffness ($Eh = 7.0, 14.4, 43.2\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$) of the flexible nozzle is defined with a Young's modulus ($E$) measured by calculating the slope of the stress–strain curve obtained from the tensile test and the averaged nozzle thickness ($h$) along the nozzle length (see § 2.2 in Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2022). For the present flexible nozzles, the wall is sophisticatedly controlled to be sufficiently thin (100–500 $\mathrm {\mu }$m) to expand by the accelerating jets. The thin-walled elastomer is connected to the relatively thicker supporting elastomer (made of the same material as the thin one) to avoid a strain-rate concentration that causes ripping (figure 1b). As demonstrated, the doughnut-shaped stainless steel support mounted on the flange robustly holds the flexible nozzle during the rapid acceleration and deceleration (figure 2a), which enables the accurate measurement of the fluid–structure interaction between the flexible nozzle and pulsed jet.
Glass particles (50 $\mathrm {\mu }$m, HSG-10, Dantec Dynamics) are seeded into the flow as a tracer, and illuminated by the green-coloured laser sheet (RayPower 5000, Dantec Dynamics) to perform particle image velocimetry at the centre plane ($z = 0$). The high-speed camera (NX5, IDT) captures particle images at rate 500–1000 Hz with sensor size $375 \times 1000$ pixels ($3D \times 8D$) (figure 1a). As illustrated in figure 1(c), the raw image is processed to highlight the nozzle wall, and its sub-pixel location is calculated using Gaussian interpolation. The particle-only image is obtained for the velocity fields by subtracting the pixel intensity corresponding to the nozzle wall from the raw image. We used the two-stage ($64 \times 64$ to $32 \times 32$ interrogation windows) cross-correlation technique to evaluate the velocity vectors, which was proven to effectively reduce particle loss or influx within the interrogation window, making the algorithm robust and precise for application to high-shear flows (Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2018, Reference Choi and Park2021, Reference Choi and Park2022). The number of the resultant velocity vectors is approximately $1800$ (spatial resolution 56.3 $\mathrm {\mu }{\rm m}\ {\rm pixel}^{-1}$), and the uncertainty is estimated within $5\,\%$ based on the error propagation theory (Maeng & Park Reference Maeng and Park2021).
Following Choi & Park (Reference Choi and Park2022), we define the effective nozzle stiffness ($\varPi _{1}=Eh/ (\rho _{f}v_{m,r}^{2}R)$) by normalizing structural stiffness ($Eh$) with the jet momentum, where $v_{m,r}$ and $R$ denote the maximum jet-exit velocity and inner radius of the rigid nozzle, respectively. This parameter represents the ratio of the tensile stress (${\sim }Eh\,R$) of the expanded nozzle to the fluid pressure (${\sim }\rho _{f}v_{m,r}^{2}R^{2}$) acting on the nozzle cross-sectional plane. The dimensionless wave speed ($\hat {c}=cT_{acc}/L$) is defined based on the physical (dimensional) wave speed $c = \sqrt {Eh/(\rho _{f}D)}$, which is normalized by the nozzle length ($L$) and acceleration time ($T_{acc}$). That is, it is the ratio of wave speed to the characteristic velocity ($L/T_{acc}$), which results in the dimensionless form $\hat {c} = \sqrt {Eh\,T_{acc}^{2}/(\rho _{f}DL^{2})} = \sqrt {\varPi _{0}^{2} \varPi _{1}/2}$. These three parameters are derived analytically from the mass and momentum conservation equations for the fluid inside the deforming flexible nozzle, and the optimal condition for the maximum thrust is found to be $\hat {c}\simeq 3.0$ (Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2022). In this study, the effective acceleration time ($\varPi _{0}$) and effective nozzle stiffness ($\varPi _{1}$) are in the ranges 0.48–0.64 and 11–400, respectively. Accordingly, the dimensionless wave speed ($\hat {c}$) encompasses the optimal value, in the range 1.1–16.0, using which the nozzle and jet behaviour near and off the optimal conditions can be compared. In addition, we varied the formation number in the range $F = 2.2\unicode{x2013}8.9$ to observe the effect of piston stroke on the fluid–structure interaction mechanism found in this study.
3. Results and discussion
Figure 2(a) illustrates the representative deformation of the most flexible nozzle ($Eh = 7.0\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$) corresponding to the intermediate jet acceleration of $\varPi _{0} = 0.57$. The temporal variations of jet-exit velocity at the centre ($x=y=0$) are plotted with the polar angle $(\theta)$ (defined in figure 2a) for various $Eh$ (figures 2b–e). In figure 2(a), the side edges of the deformed nozzle are illuminated by the laser sheet on the $x$–$y$ plane. During the jet acceleration ($t^{*} < 1.0$), the cylindrical nozzle expands radially (see $t^{*} = 0.5$) and contracts ($t^{*} = 0.9$) to its original shape. After the jet starts to decelerate ($t^{*} > 1.0$), the nozzle contracts further by the negative pressure inside the nozzle, leading to a buckled state ($t^{*} = 1.2$), and subsequently, irregular foldings occur ($t^{*} = 2.0$). During the nozzle deformation before complete folding, the jet-exit velocity always aligns with the $y$-axis (i.e. $\theta = -90^{\circ }$) for all nozzle stiffnesses $Eh = \infty, 43.2, 14.4, 7.0\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$ (and all jet conditions $\varPi _{0} = 0.48\unicode{x2013}0.64$), which indicates that the jet flow keeps the axisymmetry (the cases for $\varPi _{0} = 0.48$ are shown in figures 2b–e). A slight deviation occurs at the least flexible nozzle ($Eh = 43.2\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$) because of the weak jet momentum at $t^{*} > 3.0$ (figure 2c), which is far after the end of the acceleration. However, for all cases in the present study, the flow and nozzle deformation remain axisymmetric for $t^{*} < 2.0$ and $t^{*} < 1.0$, respectively. Thus in the following analysis, it is assumed that the jet flow and nozzle deformation are approximately axisymmetric.
Typical evolution of the pulsed jet from the rigid nozzle for the fastest acceleration of $\varPi _{0} = 0.48$ is shown in figure 3(a). After the piston starts to accelerate at $t^{*}\ (= t/T_{acc}) = 0$, the shear layer is fed into the ambient fluid near the exit, and forms the vortex ring at $y/D = -0.2$. As the jet decelerates at $t^{*} = 1.0$, the vortex ring detaches from the nozzle exit (see $t^{*} = 1.5$). The negative pressure is developed inside the nozzle by the sudden flow stall inside the nozzle and the flow induced downstream by detached vortex ring, thereby resulting in the suction of ambient flow into the nozzle (Gao et al. Reference Gao, Wang, Simon and Chyu2020). Consequently, the secondary counter-rotating vortex ring appears at the nozzle exit ($t^{*} = 2.0$). When $t^{*} > 2.0$, the secondary vortex is entrained into the nozzle, and the primary vortex ring becomes completely isolated and moves downstream (see supplementary material and movie 1 for the detailed movements of the jet vortices). There is no trailing jet behind the primary vortex because the present formation number ($F = 2.7$) is sufficiently smaller than the critical value ($F = 4$), above which the vortex ring detaches spontaneously by the excessive supply and accumulation of vorticity (Gharib et al. Reference Gharib, Rambod and Shariff1998; Krueger & Gharib Reference Krueger and Gharib2003).
The jet vortices from the flexible nozzle are significantly intensified, and their dynamics are considerably altered (figure 3b). During the acceleration ($t^{*} < 1.0$), the nozzle expands radially because of positive pressure inside, building tensile stress along the nozzle wall. Consequently, a portion of the work done by the piston is stored as elastic energy and used to increase the jet kinetic energy. The jet-exit velocity ($\hat {v}_{e}=v_{e}/v_{m,r}$) of the flexible nozzle with $Eh = 14.4\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$ is temporally slower than the rigid one at $t^{*} < 1.0$ because of the redistribution of energy (figure 3c). The stored elastic energy is released to supplement the jet kinetic energy, and $\hat {v}_e$ increases by ${\sim }170\,\%$ (for $Eh = 14.4\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$) compared to the maximum value for the rigid nozzle at $t^{*} = 2.0$, at which the jet-exit velocity of the rigid nozzle has been reduced substantially. Contrary to the rigid nozzle, the counter-rotating secondary vortex ring is not induced at the exit of the flexible nozzle (see $t^{*} = 2.0$ in figure 3b), which indicates that the negative pressure is negligible or suppressed by nozzle shrinkage. This collapse behaviour (figure 2a) is responsible for the difference in jet vortex dynamics, i.e. additional fluid induced towards the jet direction is entrained into the primary vortex ring ($t^{*} = 4.0$ in figure 3b) and further increases the circulation of the primary vortex ring at $t^{*} > 1.0$ (figure 3d). Here, the nozzle collapses inwardly after contracting beyond its original shape ($t^{*}>1.0$ in figure 2a), since the buckled structure attributed to the bending has a smaller energy state than maintaining the axisymmetric shape (Kraus Reference Kraus1967). Considering the considerably thin wall of the present nozzle ($h \sim {O}(10^{2})\ \mathrm {\mu }$m), the bending force (${\sim }h^{3}$) on the wall is far smaller than the tensile force (${\sim }h^{2}$), indicating that the collapsing motion would exert negligible fluid pressure to the surrounding fluid compared to the expansion–contraction behaviour. Thus the flexible nozzle acts as if it vanished during the deceleration stage, effectively suppressing the negative pressure that mitigates the jet velocity and vortex circulation (Krueger & Gharib Reference Krueger and Gharib2003; Gao et al. Reference Gao, Wang, Simon and Chyu2020).
In figures 3(c–e), we compared the jet characteristics in terms of the exit velocity, total circulation and total jet volume, according to $Eh$. The case $Eh = \infty$ denotes the rigid nozzle. In figure 3(d), the total circulation is defined as $\varGamma = \int _{S^+}\omega \, {\rm d} A$, where $S^+$ is the region $0 < x/D < 1.5$ and $-8 < y/D < 0$, in which half of the counter-rotating vortex ring moves downstream. The jet volume (figure 3e) passing through $y/D = -1.0$ is calculated as $V = \int _{0}^{t} \int _{-1.5D}^{1.5D} v(2{\rm \pi} x)\, {\rm d} x \, {\rm d} t$, where $v$ represents the vertical velocity, and is further normalized by the volume displaced by piston movement ($V_p$), as $\hat {V}=V/V_{p}$. Thus $\hat {V}$ shows the entrainment rate compared to the volume supplied by the piston motion. In figure 3(d), the flexible nozzle substantially increases the maximum centreline velocity ($v_e$), total circulation ($\varGamma$) and total jet volume ($V$), compared to the rigid nozzle. They are not monotonically enhanced with the flexibility. For the cases shown, the maximum increase in the exit velocity and circulation is achieved at $Eh = 14.4\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$ (see inverted triangle symbols in figures 3c,d).
Thus the dependency on flexibility changes according to the input jet condition ($\varPi _0$). In figure 4, we compared the hydrodynamic impulse ($\hat {I}_{h} = I_{h}/(v_{m,r}D^{3})$), maximum centreline velocity at nozzle exit ($\hat {v}_{m} = v_{m}/v_{m,r}$), total circulation ($\hat {\varGamma }=\varGamma / (v_{m,r}D)$) and total fluid volume ($\hat {V} = V/V_{p}$) passing through $y/D = -1.0$, depending on $Eh$ and $\varPi _0$. The hydrodynamic impulse ($I_h$) was calculated as $I_{h} = 0.5\rho _{f}\int _{C}\boldsymbol {x}\times \boldsymbol {\omega }\, {\rm d} V$ (Saffman Reference Saffman1955). Here, $\boldsymbol {x}=(r,\theta,y)$ denotes the position vector originating from the centre of the nozzle exit (as shown in figure 1b), and $\boldsymbol {\omega }=(\omega _{r},\omega _{\theta },\omega _{y})$ represents the vorticity vector. Given the axisymmetric nature of the flow ($\omega _{r}=\omega _{y}=0$) and the differential volume ${\rm d} V=2{\rm \pi} r \times {\rm d} A$, the hydrodynamic impulse simplifies to $I_{h}=0.5{\rm \pi} \rho _{f}\int _{C}r^{2}\,|\omega _{\theta }(r,y)|\, {\rm d} A$. The control surface $C$ is in the ranges $-2 \le x/D \le 2$ and $-5.5 \le y/D \le 0$ in the measurement plane, excluding the area inside the nozzle located at $y/D>0$, and $\omega _\theta$ represents the vorticity component perpendicular to the measurement plane. Also, $\hat {I}_h$ and $\hat {\varGamma }$ are measured at $t^{*} = 4.0$, and $\hat {V}$ at $t^{*} = 20.0$, after which they converge. For $\varPi _{0} = 0.48$, when the pulsed jet accelerates the fastest (figure 3), the nozzle with $Eh = 14.4 {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$ outperforms the nozzles that are more ($Eh = 7.0\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$) and less ($Eh = 43.2\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$) flexible. The maximum centreline velocity shows a strong correlation with the impulse and circulation (figures 4a–c) because the growth rates of both hydrodynamic impulse ${\rm d} I_{h}/{\rm d} t \sim \rho _{f} v_{e}^{2} A$ (Gao et al. Reference Gao, Wang, Simon and Chyu2020) and circulation ${\rm d} \varGamma /{\rm d} t \sim v_{e}^{2}/2$ (Krieg & Mohseni Reference Krieg and Mohseni2013) scale with the jet-exit velocity ($v_{e}^{2}$). The jet volume has less variation ($\Delta \hat {V}<1.0$) among different flexibilities (except for the rigid nozzle) under the same jet condition (figure 4d). However, it increases with decreasing $\varPi _0$ because of a larger amount of entrainment into the vortex ring by the faster acceleration (Ruiz, Whittlesey & Dabiri Reference Ruiz, Whittlesey and Dabiri2011). As $\varPi _0$ increases to $0.57$ and $0.64$, the maximum velocity ($\hat {v}_m$) of the least flexible nozzle ($Eh = 43.2\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$) becomes comparable to the rigid nozzle (figure 4b) because the weakened acceleration is not sufficient to expand the stiff nozzle. However, the impulse and circulation are still slightly higher than the rigid nozzle (figures 4a,c), which is attributed to the additional fluid supplied during the nozzle collapse at $t^{*} > 1.0$. For this weakly accelerated condition ($\varPi _{0} = 0.57\unicode{x2013}0.64$), softer nozzles with $Eh = 7.0$ and $14.4\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$ are still sufficiently flexible to amplify the kinetic energy of the jet. For the weakest acceleration ($\varPi _{0} = 0.64$), the optimal flexibility transitions to $Eh = 7.0\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$, supporting our claim on the optimal flexibility coupled with the flow condition.
To understand the underlying fluid–structure interaction, the radial displacement ($w_n$) of the nozzle is measured along the nozzle length ($y$) and time ($t$) with resolution $0.004D$ ($= 60\ \mathrm {\mu }$m) (figure 5a). Figures 5(b,d,f) show the overlay of nozzle edge profiles at various instants ($t^{*} < 2.0$), and figures 5(c,e,g) present the corresponding spatio-temporal contours of nozzle deformation ($\hat {w}_n$) depending on $Eh$ and $\varPi _0$. The nozzle tends to deform axisymmetrically until buckling ($t^{*}<1.0$), therefore the displacements measured at two sides (i.e. $w_{n,r}$ and $w_{n,l}$ in figure 5a) were averaged and normalized by the maximum value ($w_{n,m}$), as $\hat {w}_n=0.5(w_{n,r}+w_{n,l})/w_{n,m}$. The white area in figures 5(c,e,g) represent the data removed because of the noise caused by light refraction from the wrinkled surface. For clear comparison, figures 5(b,c) and 5(d,e) show cases with lower jet impulse, while the optimal case for maximum impulse is shown in figures 5(f,g) (all values are highlighted with a shadow in figure 4(a), and the nozzle deformations in each case are shown in the supplementary material and movie 2). For $(Eh, \varPi _0) = (14.4\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}, 0.64)$ (figures 5b,c), the nozzle expansion wave (red region) propagates from the support ($y/D = 2.0$) to the tip ($y/D = 0$) with a constant speed (visualized in figure 5(b) at $t^{*}<0.6$ and indicated by a solid arrow in figure 5c), and it bounces back at $t^{*} = 0.8$ (dashed arrow in figure 5c), along which the contraction occurs (blue region in figure 5c). The wave speed ($c$) on the nozzle surface increases with $Eh$ but decreases with the fluid inertia ($\rho _{f}D$), expressed as $c = (Eh/\rho _{f}D)^{0.5}$ (Avrahami & Gharib Reference Avrahami and Gharib2008; Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2022). Choi & Park (Reference Choi and Park2022) suggested that the thrust of the continuous jet is maximized when the travel time of the wave along the nozzle matches the jet acceleration time, resulting in the constant dimensionless wave speed ($\hat {c}=cT_{acc}/L \simeq 3.0$ from their measurements). In figures 5(b,c), $\hat {c} = 5.3$ indicates that the surface wave moves faster than the jet, thereby agreeing with the earlier contraction (at $t^{*} = 0.8$) rather than the end of jet acceleration ($t^{*} = 1.0$). The elastic potential energy is released before the jet reaches its maximum velocity, therefore the resulting jet impulse is lower than that in the other cases (figure 4a). On the other hand, the travel time of the wave is relatively longer than $T_{acc}$, i.e. $\hat {c} = 1.1$, for $(Eh, \varPi _0) = (7.0 {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}, 0.48)$ (figures 5d,e). In this case, the nozzle expands slowly because of its lower stiffness, and the contraction occurs after the jet has decelerated, producing the lower impulse (figure 4a). The contraction wave propagates from the nozzle support at $t^{*} > 1.23$ in figure 5(d) (see dashed arrow in figure 5e), instead of bouncing back from the nozzle tip. Contrary to these two off-optimal conditions, $(Eh, \varPi _0) = (14.4\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}, 0.57)$ in figures 5(f,g) shows that the nozzle contraction ends at $t^{*} = 1.0$ when the jet has reached the maximum velocity. This condition ($\hat {c} = 2.6$) produces the maximum impulse (figure 4a) close to the optimal condition suggested by Choi & Park (Reference Choi and Park2022).
In figure 6(a), we compared the hydrodynamic impulse ($I_h$) normalized by that ($I_{h,rigid}$) of the rigid nozzle depending on $\hat {c}$ for the present pulsed jets, together with the results for continuous jets (Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2022). Interestingly, $I_h$ of the pulsed jet is also maximized at $\hat {c}\simeq 3.0$. The impulse decreases sharply at $\hat {c}>3.0$ because the nozzle becomes too stiff so that the nozzle contracts earlier than the end of acceleration (figure 5a). When $\hat {c}>9.0$, the flexible nozzle behaves almost similar to the rigid one (but the impulse is still increased by the flexible nozzle at this range). When the nozzle becomes too flexible ($\hat {c}<3.0$), the nozzle contraction is far delayed beyond the instant of the maximum jet velocity (figures 5f,g). Therefore, the optimal flexibility is irrelevant to the presence of jet deceleration, which is attributed to the fact that the meaningful transfer of elastic energy to the jet kinetic energy occurs at $t^{*} < 1.0$ before the jet deceleration (figure 5c).
Although the presence of the jet deceleration does not affect the optimal condition, the achievable impulse is significantly higher for the pulsed jet, i.e. the advantage of flexibility is more pronounced for the pulsed jet. This can be understood from two aspects that originate from jet deceleration. First, the expanded nozzle is fully contracted to transfer its entire elastic energy to the jet during jet deceleration ($t^{*} > 1.0$), and second, the nozzle collapse (figure 2a) greatly suppresses the negative pressure inside the nozzle. These two effects are limited for the continuous jet because of the subsequent supply of the fluid. Therefore, the maximum $400\,\%$ increase of the impulse is achieved, which is remarkable compared to that reported in previous studies ($70\,\%$ with the orifice nozzle (Krieg & Mohseni Reference Krieg and Mohseni2013) and $5\,\%$ with the fast acceleration (Gao et al. Reference Gao, Wang, Simon and Chyu2020)). In addition, our preliminary proof-of-concept investigation showed that the flexible nozzle (as a thruster) attached to a small-scale underwater vehicle results in a ${\sim }60\,\%$ increase in the translation speed, under the same optimal condition, compared to the body with a rigid nozzle (see supplementary material and movies for the details).
The modified vortex dynamics behind the flexible nozzle is associated with the enhanced entrainment of the surrounding fluid. The large jet entrainment is closely relevant to the enhancement of propulsive efficiency by reducing the loss of kinetic energy in the wake (Linden Reference Linden2011; Ruiz et al. Reference Ruiz, Whittlesey and Dabiri2011). Figure 6(b) shows the jet volume generated by the flexible nozzle relative to the rigid one. Similar to the impulse, the jet volume from the flexible nozzle is increased greatly, which becomes the maximum at $\hat {c} \simeq 3.0$. Only $45\,\%$ of the jet volume enhancement was achieved for the cylindrical rigid nozzle with an extremely small formation number $F = 0.5$ (Olcay & Krueger Reference Olcay and Krueger2008).
Figure 7 shows how jet entrainment is augmented for the flexible nozzle. For the rigid nozzle (figure 7a), the vortex ring stops being fed immediately after the jet ends and moves downstream ($t^{*} > 1.0$). In contrast, the vortex ring from the flexible nozzle ($Eh = 7.0\ {\rm N}\ {\rm m}^{-1}$) is fed for a longer time duration (up to $t^{*} = 3.2$) during the nozzle collapse, and it grows in higher strength (faster velocity) compared to the rigid nozzle (see $t^{*} = 5.0$). Similar to the increase in the impulse (figure 6a), the entrainment rate of the pulsed jet is considerably higher than the continuous jet because it is also related to the nozzle collapse, which mitigates the negative pressure. For the present conditions, flexible nozzles with $\hat {c}<6$ are found to successfully subdue the negative pressure and attain a large entrainment. However, the dependency on the dimensionless wave speed is less salient than that of the hydrodynamic impulse. The entrainment is weakly affected by the jet acceleration, as observed in figure 4(d), therefore other factors such as the nozzle-tip movement (Dabiri & Gharib Reference Dabiri and Gharib2005) and radial velocity at the nozzle exit (Krieg & Mohseni Reference Krieg and Mohseni2013) will be involved, which are less correlated with $\hat {c}$.
We discuss briefly the effect of the formation number ($F$) on hydrodynamic thrust. Figures 8(a) and 8(b) show instantaneous jet flows at various formation numbers for the rigid and flexible nozzles, respectively, with the nozzle length $L = 0.8D$ (see supplementary material and movie 3 for the jet evolution), and figure 8(c) compares time histories of the jet-exit velocity for $F = 2.2\unicode{x2013}8.9$ ($\hat {c} = 16$). Here, the flexible nozzle with $L/D = 0.8$ generates the maximum thrust at the optimal condition ($\hat {c}\simeq 3.0$), which is detailed in the supplementary material and movies. For the rigid nozzle (figure 8a), a single vortex ring forms at $F < 4.0$, and a trailing jet with subsequent vortex rings forms above the leading vortex ring at $F > 4.0$, which is consistent with the literature (Gharib et al. Reference Gharib, Rambod and Shariff1998; Gao et al. Reference Gao, Wang, Simon and Chyu2020). For the flexible nozzle (figure 8b), the trailing jet occurs at all $F$ values, indicating the lower critical $F < 3.3$, at which the vortex ring solely occurs. For $F = 3.3$, the trailing jet looks obscure at the instant shown ($t^{*} = 4.0$) because it is dissipated considerably (the trailing jet for $F = 3.3$ can be seen in the supplementary material and movie 3). The decreased critical formation number was reported in a previous study (Choi & Park Reference Choi and Park2022) such that the pinch-off location of the jet vortices moved upwards by $54\,\%$ compared to that of the rigid nozzle for $\hat {c}=7.5$ and $F = 37$ (continuous jet) attributed to the early growth of the jet exit velocity caused by nozzle deformation. Figure 8(d) shows the hydrodynamic impulses ($I_h$) of the flexible nozzles normalized by those of the rigid nozzle ($I_{h,rigid}$) depending on $F$. Here, $I_h$ was measured at $t^{*} = 4$. It is observed that $I_{h}/I_{h,rigid} > 1.0$ for $F < 5.6$ because of the timely nozzle deformation and suppression of negative pressure (i.e. the same fluid–structure interaction mechanism holds); it converges to $1.0$ for $F > 5.6$. The value of $F$ at which $I_{h}/I_{h,rigid}$ saturates to $1.0$ is expected to increase as $\hat {c}$ becomes closer to the optimal value ($\simeq 3.0$) (not tested in the present study). In addition, $I_{h}/I_{h,rigid}$ increases as $F$ decreases because the thrust-augmenting mechanism works at the early stage of jet generation and affects the initial volume of the jet fluid. For the flexible nozzle, the clear relevance between the critical $F = 4$ (for rigid cylindrical nozzle) and thrust enhancement is yet to be found; instead, the maximum thrust is dictated by the optimal condition (figure 6). Although the formation number significantly affects the vortex interaction and its formation, its contribution (up to $10\,\%$) to the total jet impulse (Gao et al. Reference Gao, Wang, Simon and Chyu2020) is considerably less than that ($400\,\%$) achieved through the optimal flexibility condition of the present study (figure 3b).
4. Concluding remarks
In this study, the fluid–structure interaction related to the augmentation of the hydrodynamic impulse and jet entrainment from the flexible nozzle was studied experimentally for the single-stroke pulsed jet. With a rigid cylindrical nozzle as reference, we considered three flexible nozzles while varying the velocity schedule (i.e. acceleration time) of the pulsed jets. The flexible nozzle enhanced the hydrodynamic impulse and jet entrainment substantially, which were also considerably higher than those achieved for the continuous jet studied in Choi & Park (Reference Choi and Park2022). The measurement of nozzle deformation using the sub-pixel interpolation technique demonstrated that the expansion–contraction wave propagation on the nozzle surface was associated with the determination of optimal flexibility. Interestingly, the optimal condition based on the wave speed holds for both the pulsed and continuous jets, indicating that the presence of the jet deceleration stage was irrelevant to the optimal condition. The large increase in impulse and entrainment can be explained by the beneficial effects of the timely nozzle collapse that amplifies the jet kinetic energy and mitigates the negative pressure attributed to the jet deceleration, inducing the additional entrainment to the primary vortex ring.
The flexible nozzle has a unique capability to amplify the positive pressure at the acceleration stage of the jet and suppress the negative pressure at the deceleration phase. Despite its simple geometry, the flexible nozzle can decouple the acceleration and deceleration jets, which is the inherent limitation of issuing the pulsed jet through a rigid nozzle. Considering the tested Reynolds number range, we believe that the flexible nozzle has the potential to enhance the propulsion performance of small-scale (bio-inspired) underwater vehicles, for which the Reynolds numbers are ${O} (10\unicode{x2013}10^4)$ (Moslemi & Krueger Reference Moslemi and Krueger2011; Christianson et al. Reference Christianson, Cui, Ishida, Bi, Zhu, Pawlak and Tolley2020), or help us to understand biological thrusters in nature, such as juvenile squid (Anderson & Grosenbaugh Reference Anderson and Grosenbaugh2005). The current mechanism can be applied to the soft-matter valves to enhance the strength of pulsatile flows in biomedical (Becsek, Pietrasanta & Obrist Reference Becsek, Pietrasanta and Obrist2020; Schofield et al. Reference Schofield, Baksamawi, Campos, Alexiadis, Nash, Brill and Vigolo2020) and process engineering where the Reynolds numbers are in a similar range. Finally, the primary mechanisms of enhancing the jet thrust and entrainment are expected to be valid even for higher Reynolds numbers (${>}10^4$) compared to those considered in the present study, because the roles of fluid inertia and the tension in the elastic nozzle are dominant factors rather than viscous friction or turbulence, which would be an interesting topic for future work.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material and movies are available at https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2024.720.
Funding
This work was supported by research grants (2020R1A2C2014510, 2021R1A4A1032023) through the National Research Foundation of Korea funded by the Korean government (MSIT), and the Institute of Engineering Research at Seoul National University.
Declaration of interests
The authors report no conflict of interest.