1. Introduction
Water entry of solid bodies has been a subject of intense investigation for over a century, with rich multiscale physics revealed at all stages of the process. Progress in the field has been principally driven by a need for understanding the hydrodynamic loading experienced by impacting engineered naval structures such as ships, seaplanes or projectiles, directly motivating early theoretical developments in the area by von Kármán (Reference von Kármán1929) and Wagner (Reference Wagner1932). Other impactors such as aerospace structures (Seddon & Moatamedi Reference Seddon and Moatamedi2006) or amphibious autonomous vehicles (Siddall & Kovač Reference Siddall and Kovač2014; Shi et al. Reference Shi, Pan, Yim, Yan and Zhang2019b) have benefited from advancements in the area. Beyond informing engineering applications, such forces can prove fatal for human divers if the hydrodynamics are not respected (Pandey et al. Reference Pandey, Yuk, Chang, Fish and Jung2022).
For relatively blunt bodies such as shallow wedges or spheres, the highest impact forces occur during the very early times of impact, in the so-called ‘slamming’ phase (Shiffman & Spencer Reference Shiffman and Spencer1945b; May Reference May1970; Moghisi & Squire Reference Moghisi and Squire1981; Korobkin & Pukhnachov Reference Korobkin and Pukhnachov1988; Howison, Ockendon & Wilson Reference Howison, Ockendon and Wilson1991; Miloh Reference Miloh1991; Abrate Reference Abrate2011). It is well established that the primary contribution to this initial hydrodynamic resistance stems from the added mass effect of the fluid: an appreciable volume of fluid must be accelerated in a short time frame to match the speed of the impinging body (Abrate Reference Abrate2011; Truscott, Epps & Belden Reference Truscott, Epps and Belden2014; Jung Reference Jung2021). High impact forces can result in structural damage, present risk to sensitive onboard equipment, or be dangerous for passengers or biological divers. Thus understanding the relationship between the impactor properties and the resultant impact forces, and developing predictable and controllable ways to mediate such forces, are of utmost importance.
With the motivation of force reduction in mind, many prior works have focused on how the impact forces are influenced by impactor geometry. For instance, a finely tapered impactor significantly reduces the initial impact forces as compared with more blunt geometries (Baldwin Reference Baldwin1971; Bodily, Carlson & Truscott Reference Bodily, Carlson and Truscott2014; Vincent et al. Reference Vincent, Xiao, Yohann, Jung and Kanso2018), a physical principle that biological divers such as seabirds evidently exploit to survive high-speed impacts in pursuit of prey (Chang et al. Reference Chang, Croson, Straker, Gart, Dove, Gerwin and Jung2016; Sharker et al. Reference Sharker, Holekamp, Mansoor, Fish and Truscott2019). In many cases, the impactor geometry cannot be suitably modified and other countermeasures must be considered. For instance, by preceding a primary impactor with a fluid jet or small solid object, some of the underlying liquid can be accelerated or displaced before impact and impact forces of the trailing body notably reduced (Speirs et al. Reference Speirs, Belden, Pan, Holekamp, Badlissi, Jones and Truscott2019a; Rabbi et al. Reference Rabbi, Speirs, Kiyama, Belden and Truscott2021). In terms of modifications to the impactor, a sacrificial and permanently deformable nose cap can be added to absorb some of the energy during impact (Shi, Gao & Pan Reference Shi, Gao and Pan2019a; Li et al. Reference Li, Sun, Zong, Li and Zhao2021), but is only effective for a single impact. An alternative approach, common to countless other examples, is to introduce elastic compliance to ‘cushion’ the impact, thereby extending the time scale of the impulse and reducing peak forces. In the current context, this manifests as a fluid–structure interaction problem wherein the structural and hydrodynamic responses are intrinsically coupled. The role of impactor elasticity in air–water entry has received some limited attention, primarily over the past few decades.
The impact of elastic structures on fluid interfaces are often referred to as ‘hydroelastic’ problems. A key non-dimensional parameter that naturally emerges in many such investigations is a ratio of time scales sometimes referred to as a hydroelastic factor (${R}_{F}$): the time scale of the hydrodynamic loading to the free fundamental oscillation period of the elastic structure (Kim et al. Reference Kim, Vorus, Troesch and Gollwitzer1996; Faltinsen Reference Faltinsen1999; Ren, Javaherian & Gilbert Reference Ren, Javaherian and Gilbert2021). The vast majority of prior works have focused on the coupled response of continuously deformable flexible wedges as a model for ship hulls (Faltinsen Reference Faltinsen1999; Abrate Reference Abrate2011; Maki et al. Reference Maki, Lee, Troesch and Vlahopoulos2011; Panciroli et al. Reference Panciroli, Abrate, Minak and Zucchelli2012; Khabakhpasheva & Korobkin Reference Khabakhpasheva and Korobkin2013; Shams, Zhao & Porfiri Reference Shams, Zhao and Porfiri2017; Ren et al. Reference Ren, Javaherian and Gilbert2021), although a few other continuous structures have been studied as well such as elastic spheres (Hurd et al. Reference Hurd, Belden, Jandron, Fanning, Bower and Truscott2017; Yang et al. Reference Yang, Sun, Wei, Wang, Xia and Wang2021). Other investigations have proposed simpler lumped mass models (reduced degrees of freedom) of continuous elastic structures in an attempt to simplify the problem and better interpret the consequences of elasticity on the resultant structural forces (Miller & Merten Reference Miller and Merten1951; Gollwitzer & Peterson Reference Gollwitzer and Peterson1995; Kim et al. Reference Kim, Vorus, Troesch and Gollwitzer1996; Lafrati et al. Reference Lafrati, Carcaterra, Ciappi and Campana2000; Carcaterra & Ciappi Reference Carcaterra and Ciappi2004; Bogaert & Kaminski Reference Bogaert and Kaminski2007). Despite these efforts, very few controlled experiments on simplified structures have supported such studies, and none present a systematic exploration of the parameter space.
The most similar experimental work to the present study was completed very recently wherein the loading on an axisymmetric two degree-of-freedom (2DOF) (one elastic mode) impactor was considered (Wu et al. Reference Wu, Zhang, Wang, Shen, Yang and Ren2020). The impactor was composed of a rigid hemispherical nose and slender body connected by a coil-spring element. Only one geometry and spring constant were explored in the work, and for that case, the impact force on the body was reduced compared with a rigid counterpart over all impact velocities tested. While the finding conforms to standard intuition one might associate with a ‘cushioned’ impact, no predictive model was developed to quantify or generalize the measured effect. As we demonstrate in the present work through combined experiment and modelling, the impact force on the trailing body of a 2DOF elastic system is highly sensitive to both the elastic and hydrodynamic parameters of the problem, and the force can either decrease or increase as a consequence of the elasticity, in general.
In the present work, we design and test a 2DOF (corresponding to one axial elastic mode) slender axisymmetric impactor with a hemispherical nose. By using a configuration of custom flexures as the compliant elements interfacing the nose and body, a highly linear elastic response is achieved without static or sliding friction and only very weak material damping. Furthermore, the geometry of the overall structure is carefully designed to separate the frequency of the fundamental (axial) mode from all other elastic modes, ultimately rendering it an excellent approximation to a linear 2DOF system. The deceleration of the body during water entry is directly measured using an onboard untethered accelerometer at very high sampling rate. A range of impact velocities, spring stiffnesses, nose radii and nose-to-body mass ratios are tested and the peak forces measured in all experiments are collapsed along a single curve using inertial scaling and an appropriately defined hydroelastic factor. A critical hydroelastic factor defines the transition from a force decrease to increase as compared with the rigid counterpart. We perform additional experiments with high stiffness flexible impactors that, despite constituting a less robust representation of a linear 2DOF system, illustrate the behaviour of the system in the limit of high hydroelastic factor. A predictive theory is simultaneously developed that accounts for the added mass effect during the slamming stage, and is shown to quantitatively capture the measurements. As we demonstrate by considering the case of linear damping, the simple theory can be readily extended to other nose geometries or structural elements and thus is anticipated to prove useful for the design and analysis of more complex engineered structures.
2. Experimental methods
2.1. Experimental set-up
We perform experiments in which a slender impactor with a hemispherical nose (radius $R = 22.23\ {\rm mm}$ or 29.64 mm) enters a quiescent water bath with fluid density $\rho$, viscosity $\mu$ and interfacial tension $\gamma$. Impacts are at normal incidence with impact speeds $V$ ranging from 2 to $6\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$. A schematic of the 2DOF impactor and bath is shown in figure 1(b) and the range of parameters in our experiments is reported in table 1. The typical Reynolds number $\rho V R/\mu$ is $O(10^5)$, the Weber number $\rho V^2 R/\gamma$ is $O(10^4)$ and the Froude number $V^2/(g R)$ is $O(10)$. Hence the fluid resistance of the presently studied impacts is dominated by fluid inertia, with additional resistances due to viscosity, surface tension and hydrostatics as much weaker effects. The water bath is rectangular with length, width and depth of approximately 1 m, in order to approximate an infinite domain and avoid the influence of reflected surface waves during impact. The flexible impactor consists of a rigid body and nose coupled by a set of elastic flexure spring elements. The body contains an onboard accelerometer to measure the impact deceleration. A ferromagnetic ball is embedded in the body which allows the impactor to be dropped into free fall from an electromagnet at varying heights. Figure 1(c) shows the design of a typical flexure spring element which we laser-cut out of acetal plastic. The flexure features four thin beams which attach at the ends to a thick backbone and two mounting pads which are bolted to the impactor nose and body. The nose and body are coupled by three flexure spring elements in a rotationally symmetric pattern, as can be seen in figure 1(a). The flexures may be modelled as a set of guided cantilever beams (Judy Reference Judy1994) and hence the overall axial stiffness $k$ of the flexible impactor can be estimated by $k = 3 E b h^3 / L^3$ where $E$ is the elastic modulus of the material and $b$, $h$ and $L$ are the beam dimensions. In practice, this equation overpredicts the impactor stiffness because it does not account for compliance of the flexure backbone or mounting pads. Quasistatic compression testing of the flexures reveals a linear response with minimal hysteresis, as illustrated in figure 1(d), and we vary the flexure beam height $h$ in order to achieve the experimental stiffness values of $k=4.29$, 7.80 and $13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$. Based on the results of preliminary experiments, these stiffness values were chosen in order to observe both a peak force decrease and increase as compared with the rigid case. Due to the flexure configuration and beam geometry, the other bending and torsional modes of the impactor are much stiffer than the axial mode; in addition to behaving like springs, the flexures also serve the purpose of bearings which guide the relative motion of the nose and body. The key advantage of the flexure design is that, due to the monolithic structure, the axial elastic mode of the impactor experiences no static or sliding friction as it deflects. A photograph of the impactor during water entry in figure 1(a) (or Supplementary movie 1) shows the behaviour of the flexures as the impactor achieves a submergence depth of approximately one radius and is enveloped in a crown splash. Despite the minimal deflection of the flexure beams, we find that the elasticity has a profound effect on the impact dynamics. Additional experiments are performed with high axial stiffness impactors by replacing the lower stiffness flexures with flexures that are significantly shortened ($k=760\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$) or a solid plate of acetal plastic ($k=21\,600\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$). Although these configurations allow us to explore significantly higher axial stiffnesses while keeping all other parameters fixed, the axial mode is no longer the fundamental oscillation mode. Additional details regarding the impactor fabrication and characterization may be found in Appendix A.
2.2. Experimental procedure and processing
The impactor is suspended from an electromagnet with the tip of the nose at a height $H = V^2/(2g)$ above the air–water interface and allowed to rest for 5 min in order for any minimal swinging motion to decay. The impactor is then dropped into free fall while the onboard accelerometer (enDAQ S4) measures acceleration in three orthogonal axes (one axial, two radial) with 20 kHz sampling rate. Impacts are illuminated with diffuse white back light and filmed at 20 000 frames per second with a Phantom Veo camera equipped with a 50 mm Nikon lens at the height of the air–water interface or slightly above. The impact speed $V$ is measured from the high-speed entry videos by dividing the difference in the nose tip position at impact and 50 frames before impact by the appropriate time difference (2.5 ms). The impactor diameter is used as the length reference to convert from pixels to physical units. Because the field of view is centred on the impactor nose at the moment of impact, lens distortions have a negligible effect on the velocity measurements. Furthermore, we set the drop height $H$ using a precisely marked plumb line which results in a maximum impact velocity uncertainty of 2.5 % with respect to the nominal value. In order to plot only the acceleration due to impact with the water surface and not the contribution from gravity, the mean accelerometer reading during free fall is subtracted from the acceleration data. When estimating the maximum impact acceleration, the slamming phase peaks in acceleration signals from each trial are first aligned using the cross-correlation method and $t=0$ is selected as the point at which the acceleration readings noticeably depart from free-fall behaviour. Then a time window is defined which encompasses the maximum readings in the raw data from each trial. Estimates for the trial-averaged maximum acceleration and time of the peak use all of the data points in this time window. This method allows both sensor noise and the deviation between trials to be included in the uncertainty estimate on the peak. The error bars in subsequent figures incorporate this peak uncertainty as well as, when appropriate, other measurement uncertainty on values such as the impactor stiffness by use of the standard Taylor series approximation for multivariable error propagation from uncorrelated variables.
3. Results
3.1. Peak deceleration of the flexible impactor
Figure 2(a) shows the impactor body deceleration as a function of time after the moment of first impact for experiments with $V=4\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$ and $R=22.23$ mm. As a baseline, we conduct experiments with an equivalent rigid impactor which has the same total mass (within 2.4 %) as the flexible impactor. The rigid impactor is created by omitting the flexure assembly and rigidly fixing the nose to the impactor body. The rigid impactor experiences a sharp peak force during early times in the slamming phase which occurs up to a submergence depth of approximately one radius. However, despite the large forces during the slamming phase, the speed of the rigid impactor decreases only minimally – on average 1.6 % by $t = R/V$ (one radius depth) – and it proceeds at a high rate into the bath, forming a crown splash and eventually a trailing air cavity as it pierces deeper into the water (Supplementary movie 2). The impactor speed is plotted directly against time for these experimental cases in Appendix B. The splash and cavity formation for the flexible impactor, as seen in figure 2(b) or Supplementary movie 3, are similar to the rigid case during the slamming phase, though the cases with the 3-D printed noses sometimes feature larger splashes and enhanced cavity size, likely due to the higher surface roughness and lower wettability compared with the machined aluminium noses (Duez et al. Reference Duez, Ybert, Clanet and Bocquet2007; Aristoff & Bush Reference Aristoff and Bush2009; Speirs et al. Reference Speirs, Mansoor, Belden and Truscott2019b; Watson et al. Reference Watson, Bom, Weinberg, Souchik and Dickerson2021). Increased hydrophobicity has also been shown to increase the force of impact on a sphere throughout the cavity-forming phase (Truscott, Epps & Techet Reference Truscott, Epps and Techet2012), though the effect is predominantly isolated to larger depths than focused on in the present work. Although the interfacial physics of the cavity-forming phase are certainly rich, the deceleration of the rigid impactor during the time after the slamming phase in our experiments is relatively uninteresting, increasing only slowly as the steady state drag develops. The acceleration profiles of the flexible impactor body entering at $4\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$ with $k=4.29\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$ and $7.80\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$ (figure 2a) follow the typical intuition for a ‘cushioned’ impact; the impulse from the water entry ‘shock’ is spread out over a longer time. Consequently, the maximum deceleration is decreased compared with the rigid case and the peak occurs at a later time, around one radius of submergence depth. The oscillations of the impactor persist for several cycles, dissipating slightly due to damping as the impactor continues its descent. Like in the rigid case, the mean of the flexible impactor deceleration curve increases gradually at later times as the steady state drag develops. However, surprisingly, the peak deceleration for the flexible impactor with $k=13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$ is higher than the rigid case, indicating that, in general, the body acceleration during impact can either increase or decrease as a result of adding elasticity. Furthermore, we find that whether the impact acceleration increases or decreases for a given stiffness depends on the impact speed. The peak deceleration of the rigid and flexible impactors is plotted against impact speed in figure 2(c). For all experiments in this figure, the total impactor mass is held constant and, in the flexible impacts, the nose contains 12 % of the total mass. The peak deceleration of the rigid impactor increases like the square of the impact speed as shown in the inset in figure 2(c), confirming the anticipated inertially dominated regime. At the highest speed, all of the flexible impactors experience a peak deceleration reduction compared with the rigid case but the opposite is true at the lowest speed, where all of the flexible impactors experience a peak deceleration increase. This result portends an important subtlety in the design of elastic force reduction mechanisms for applications. Namely, the stiffness of the impactor must be carefully matched to the operating conditions or else the addition of elasticity can have significant deleterious effects. In order to rationalize, interpret and synthesize these observations, we develop a reduced mathematical model of the impact forces in what follows.
3.2. Rigid added mass model
The hydrodynamic force during the slamming phase can be understood in the context of the added mass effect, originally applied by von Kármán (Reference von Kármán1929) to the problem of water entry. Since the impact is inertially dominated, the impact force may be thought of as the rate at which the impactor must transfer momentum to a virtual quantity of fluid mass – $m(x)$ in figure 3(a) – in order to accelerate that added fluid mass to the current impactor speed $\dot {x}(t)$. Conservation of momentum on the impactor and added mass system dictates that
where $M$ is the mass of the impactor. Integrating with the initial conditions that $m(0) = 0$ and $\dot {x}(0)=V$ yields the following expression for the acceleration during impact (Abrate Reference Abrate2011):
Thus the impact force profile can be calculated given only the added mass $m$ as a function of depth $x$. The added mass function for a sphere was derived by Shiffman & Spencer (Reference Shiffman and Spencer1945a, Reference Shiffman and Spencer1947) from potential flow around an axisymmetric lens. By neglecting deformation of the interface and higher-order velocity terms, the dynamic boundary condition reduces to a statement of zero potential at $x=0$, and hence the impact problem is equivalent to uniform flow around the submerged portion of the body, mirrored about the undisturbed interface. Shiffman & Spencer later refined the model with additional theoretical and experimental corrections which account for the deformation of the interface and wetting of the sphere (Shiffman & Spencer Reference Shiffman and Spencer1945b). This corrected added mass function $m(x)$ is used in the present work and is reproduced along with its derivative $\textrm {d} m / \textrm {d}\kern 0.06em x$ in the supporting datasets. Although the corrected curve is only available from Shiffman & Spencer (Reference Shiffman and Spencer1945b) up to a depth of $x=R$, we assume it smoothly tapers to zero at $x=1.15R$ and remains zero thereafter. Whether the value of $\textrm {d} m / \textrm {d}\kern 0.06em x$ for $x>R$ is left constant, set abruptly to zero or smoothly tapered to zero makes no significant quantitative difference in our predictions presented here. These functions are the only externally derived components of our model, which is otherwise self-contained and described completely herein. Shiffman & Spencer also define a dimensionless number
which compares the impactor mass with the mass of an equivalent volume of fluid assuming a spherical impactor. When $\sigma$ is sufficiently large, as in the current experiments, $M \gg m$ (that is, the impactor mass is much larger than the peak added mass) and (3.2) can be reduced to
where $F$ is the impact force on the body. As a consequence of large $\sigma$, the speed of the body does not change appreciably during the slamming phase and the impact force reaches a limiting curve (in practice, when $\sigma =3$, the maximum impact force is already 96 % of the infinite $\sigma$ case). Hence, we can define an impact drag coefficient ${C}_{F}$ based on $\textrm {d} m / \textrm {d}\kern 0.06em x$ as
Assuming a heavy impactor with a given nose shape, ${C}_{F}$ is a function of time (or, interchangeably, depth) alone. The impact drag coefficient for the high $\sigma$ limit reported by Shiffman & Spencer (Reference Shiffman and Spencer1945b) agrees excellently with rigid experiments performed with $V=2$ to $6\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$ and $R=22.23$ mm or 29.64 mm, as shown in figure 3(b). The experimental curves collapse with the inertial force scale $\frac {1}{2} \rho V^2 {\rm \pi}R^2$ and impact time scale $R/V$, indicating that the added mass during the slamming phase is independent of both the impactor speed and the size of the splash and air cavity, which vary throughout the experimental range of impact speeds. Because the nose is not a complete hemisphere in the $R=29.64$ mm rigid experiments (it is a complete hemisphere in all other experiments), the force curves in figure 3(b) are truncated at the point where the outer edge of the nose would first contact the undisturbed free surface. However, the peak force, which is the primary quantity of interest and used for comparison with the flexible experiments, is still captured accurately. Furthermore, the rigid results for both radii agree well with the numerous classic experimental studies for the force of impact on a rigid sphere in terms of both scaling and peak impact drag coefficient (Watanabe Reference Watanabe1934; May & Woodhull Reference May and Woodhull1948, Reference May and Woodhull1950; Richardson Reference Richardson1948; Moghisi & Squire Reference Moghisi and Squire1981).
3.3. Flexible added mass model
We extend the added mass model to the case of an impacting simple harmonic oscillator by considering an external spring force on the nose-plus-added-mass system, as illustrated in figure 3(c). The parameter $\alpha$ is introduced which equals the ratio of the nose mass to the total impactor mass, $M$. Hence conservation of momentum for the impactor nose-plus-added-mass system is written as
where $x_b$ and $x_n$ are the positions of the impactor body and nose, respectively. Integrating as before, the equation of motion for the nose is
The second term on the right-hand side is equivalent to the hydrodynamic resistance from added mass as presented in (3.2), while the first term is new and accounts for an additional momentum exchange via the spring element. Since the only force felt by the body comes from the spring, the equation of motion for the body is simply
Using the Shiffman & Spencer added mass function $m$, (3.7) and (3.8) are numerically integrated with an RK4 scheme with trapezoidal rule for the integral terms and the deceleration of the body is compared with experimental results at $V = 4\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$ and $\alpha =0.12$ in figure 3(d). The model agrees well with the experimental data and captures the transition in the peak deceleration for experiments with $k=13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$ although it tends to underpredict the peak deceleration, most significantly for the $k=4.29\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$ experiments. In this case, the peak deceleration occurs after $tV/R=1$ in the region where Shiffman & Spencer's potential flow theory predicts that ${C}_{F}$ goes to zero. Experimentally, however, the contribution of form drag leads to non-zero impact force at late times as seen in figures 2(a) and 3(b). When the peak deceleration occurs at later non-dimensional times (such as with low stiffness or high speed), the accuracy of the model can be improved by including the contribution of form drag – directly from the experimental curves in figure 3(b), for instance, as shown in Appendix C – in the added mass function $m$. Figure 3(d) also shows the prediction for the deceleration of the flexible impactor centre of mass, $\ddot {x}_c = \alpha \ddot {x}_n + (1-\alpha ) \ddot {x}_b$, which is equal to the overall deceleration due to the hydrodynamic force. Despite its simplicity, this model captures the two-way coupling between the hydrodynamic force and impactor elasticity in the problem, with the added mass force term varying both explicitly as a function of nose depth and implicitly based on the nose and body velocities through the structural coupling. However, the hydrodynamic force deviates only slightly from the rigid case, indicating that a further simplified one-way coupled model may be adequate. By formally assuming $\alpha M \gg m$ (that is, the nose mass is much larger than the peak added mass), (3.7) and (3.8) simplify to
where $F(t)$ is the hydrodynamic force in the rigid case given by (3.5). In our experiments, the ratio $\alpha M / \max [m]$ takes values from 1.7 to 9.3. A solution to (3.9) and (3.10) essentially comprises the structural response of the flexible impactor to the hydrodynamic forcing associated with the impact of a rigid sphere at constant velocity.
3.4. Peak force transition
In order to understand the mechanism by which a high stiffness impactor can experience increased force compared with the equivalent rigid impactor, (3.9) and (3.10) can be recast in modal coordinates, resulting in equations of motion for the rigid body mode (centre of mass) and elastic mode as
where $\delta = x_b-x_n$. When $\delta =0$, the spring is at its natural length. By combining (3.9) and (3.12), the acceleration of the impactor body can be written as
Consequently, the acceleration of the impactor body (the quantity of interest, and directly measured in experiment), can be understood as the sum of contributions from the hydrodynamic force and the elastic mode. Furthermore, from (3.12), it can be seen that $\ddot {\delta }>0$ in very early times (as $F(t)<0$), and thus the spring initially serves to isolate the body from the hydrodynamic forcing. For all of the presently studied impacts, the hydrodynamic force has the same characteristic shape with a sharp increase to the peak followed by a slower decay (figure 3d solid black and dotted lines). For impacts with low stiffness springs, the contribution from the elastic mode counteracts the peak in hydrodynamic force throughout the slamming phase and, as a result, the body experiences reduced peak deceleration. On the other hand, in the high stiffness case, the impactor body experiences the high frequency oscillations of the elastic mode (with $\ddot {\delta }<0$ earlier in the slamming phase) on top of the hydrodynamic forcing and thus the peak deceleration is increased. This interpretation suggests that the relationship between the hydrodynamic time scale and the impactor oscillation frequency plays a key role in determining whether the peak force will increase or decrease: if the elastic mode begins to oscillate before the hydrodynamic force decays, the impactor body will experience increased force. This ratio of time scales emerges directly when non-dimensionalizing the governing equations (3.12) and (3.13) using the length scale $R$ and the time scale $R/V$ in order to reach
where the non-dimensional variables are marked with tildes. The new non-dimensional parameter ${R}_{F}$ is defined as
This so-called hydroelastic factor is the ratio of the time scale of the hydrodynamic loading to the free fundamental oscillation period of the elastic impactor. Since (3.15) has the same form as an undamped simple harmonic oscillator subjected to external forcing, the non-dimensional force on the impactor body may be predicted by computing the convolution of the hydrodynamic forcing and the elastic unit impulse response as
Figures 4(a) and 4(b) show the non-dimensional maximum impact force $M \max [\ddot {x}_b]=M [\ddot {x}_b]_m$ and time of peak force $t_{m}$ as a function of ${R}_{F}$ for flexible impact experiments with $V=2$ to $6\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$, $k=4.29$ to $13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$, $\alpha =0.12$ or 0.24 and $R=22.23$ mm or 29.64 mm. The experiments collapse to a single curve which agrees excellently with the model in (3.17). At some critical value near ${R}_{F} \approx 2$, the peak force on the flexible impactor exceeds the non-dimensional peak force on the equivalent spherical rigid impactor which is approximately 1.05. The results of the two-way coupled model in (3.7) and (3.8) are plotted as well; as previously discussed, the two-way coupled model tends to underpredict the maximum impact force but captures the time of peak force more accurately than the convolution integral. Thus, we have shown that the force on the body depends only on the impact drag coefficient ${C}_{F}$ for the equivalent rigid case, which is a consequence of the nose geometry, and the hydroelastic factor ${R}_{F}$, which depends on the design of the elastic structure and impact velocity.
Two notable comments remain. The first regards the data point which furthest deviates from the theory in figure 4(a), corresponding to experiments with $V=2\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$, $k=4.29\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$ and $\alpha =0.24$. The elastic mode of the flexible impactor is not constrained during free fall but, in all other cases, the oscillations are so slight that they have no noticeable effect on the peak acceleration. However, this data point represents the ‘worst’ case scenario with the heaviest nose, weakest spring and least time during free fall for the oscillations to dissipate. As such, we observe that the phase of the free-fall oscillation at impact significantly influences the force. In particular, $\delta (0)<0$ for these experiments – the impactor is ‘prestretched’ – which increases the impact force compared with the $\delta (0)=0$ case. This effect can be captured by changing the initial conditions of the two-way coupled model. Conversely, according to the model, a ‘precompressed’ ($\delta (0)>0$) impactor would experience reduced force at these operating parameters. This point is explored in more detail in Appendix D. The second comment is a reminder that only the slamming phase of impact is considered in the present study; in some rare cases (particularly at low $k$ or low $V$), the maximum force during slamming is exceeded at much later times when the trailing air cavity pinches off. Consequently, additional considerations must be made in these cases if the goal is to predict the maximum force during the entire impact.
3.5. High stiffness limit
Intuitively, as the stiffness of the impactor increases to sufficiently large values (corresponding to high ${R}_{F}$), its behaviour should eventually return to the ‘rigid’ case. In order to observe this behaviour, we conducted experiments with two additional flexure spring designs with high stiffness values of $k=760\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$ and $21\,600\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$. Since these values exceed the capabilities of our tensile testing machine, the stiffness values were instead extracted from the impactor natural frequencies which were measured by suspending the impactor from a low stiffness bungee and exciting the axial mode with an impact hammer. As shown in figure 5, the high stiffness experiments performed with $V=2$ to $6\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$, $R=22.23$ mm and $\alpha = 0.12$ or 0.24 also collapse nicely onto the theoretical curve predicted by (3.17) despite the fact that the axial mode no longer represents the fundamental mode, with bending modes predicted to occur at lower frequencies (Appendix A). By substantially increasing the impactor's axial stiffness, it is possible to extend our experimental ${R}_{F}$ values by more than an order of magnitude while keeping other experimental parameters the same. For impacts near ${R}_{F}\approx 10$, the non-dimensional peak force achieves values that are approximately double those in the equivalent rigid case before steadily decreasing as ${R}_{F}$ is further increased. However, despite spanning nearly four orders of magnitude in stiffness in our flexible experiments, the peak of the equivalent rigid case was not recovered: even at ${R}_{F}\approx 200$, the measured (and predicted) peak force exceeds the rigid case by more than 30 % as seen in figure 5(a). In fact, according to the model, it is not until ${R}_{F}$ achieves a value near 4500 that the peak force returns to within 5 % of the rigid case. Past ${R}_{F}\approx {20}$, the time of the peak force is essentially the same as in the equivalent rigid case as demonstrated in figure 5(b). Note that the odd bumpiness in the theoretical curves at high ${R}_{F}$ is physical in origin – once ${R}_{F}$ is high enough for several impactor oscillations to occur before the hydrodynamic force reaches its peak, the time and magnitude of the peak force are highly sensitive to the relative phase of the impactor oscillations and hydrodynamic force.
3.6. Effect of damping
A final question of high practical relevance that can now be addressed with our validated model is the influence of damping on the behaviours elucidated herein. The model culminating in (3.17) can be readily extended to an impactor which is a linearly damped harmonic oscillator. We replace the undamped unit impulse response function in the convolution with the appropriate damped unit impulse response function $g(t)$ and let
The unit impulse response functions $g(t)$ for the damped impactor used in (3.18) are solutions to
which are given by
Then, the dimensionless impact force on the body is given by
Here, $\zeta$ is the impactor damping ratio defined as
where $c$ is the damping coefficient. The theoretical maximum impact force versus ${R}_{F}$ is plotted for several values of $\zeta$ in figure 6. For the impactors with stiffness values $k=4.29$, 7.80 and $13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$, the damping ratio $\zeta$ is $0.007 \pm 0.001$ as measured from ring down tests. Equation (3.24) predicts that damping tends to lower the peak force at high ${R}_{F}$, but increases the peak force at low ${R}_{F}$. This general trend is consistent with the physics of passive vibration isolation. As $\zeta$ increases, the critical ${R}_{F}$ where the peak force is equal to the equivalent rigid case shifts in a non-monotonic way, first increasing and then starting to decrease near critical damping. At high damping, the curve returns to the rigid case. For an impactor with a fixed stiffness that must perform over a wide range of operating conditions, an underdamped system could be designed to maintain significant peak force reduction at high speeds (low ${R}_{F}$) without incurring such a large penalty at low speeds (high ${R}_{F}$) as the undamped system.
4. Discussion
In the present work, we have provided experimental and theoretical treatment of a simplified hydroelastic problem involving the water entry of a 2DOF (one axial elastic mode) impactor with a hemispherical nose. The impactor nose and body are coupled with a set of compliant flexure springs in order to achieve a system that closely approximates a simple harmonic oscillator. Using an onboard accelerometer, we directly measure the deceleration of the body during water entry over a wide range of impact speeds, spring stiffnesses, nose radii and nose to body mass ratios. We accompany these experiments with a predictive theory based on the added mass effect and show that, in a certain regime with high practical relevance, the peak slamming force only depends on two dimensionless quantities. These quantities are the impact drag coefficient function ${C}_{F}$, which is prescribed by the nose geometry, and the hydroelastic factor ${R}_{F}$, which relates the hydrodynamic and impactor elastic mode time scales. At low ${R}_{F}$, which corresponds to low stiffness or high impact speed, the flexible impactor body experiences reduced force as compared with an equivalent rigid impactor. However, flexibility can also increase the force once ${R}_{F}$ exceeds a critical value. We use our validated model to make a prediction for the damped case and show that, if an impactor must operate over a wide range of ${R}_{F}$ values, an underdamped design could recover significant force reduction at low ${R}_{F}$ without such a penalty at high ${R}_{F}$. As reviewed in the introduction, the present work is by no means the first to consider the role of impactor elasticity on the structural loading during water entry. Throughout prior studies, some have demonstrated systematic force reduction (Wu et al. Reference Wu, Zhang, Wang, Shen, Yang and Ren2020) or force increase (May Reference May1970; Shi et al. Reference Shi, Pan, Yim, Yan and Zhang2019b), while others have suggested both possibilities depending on the time scales of the problem (Kim et al. Reference Kim, Vorus, Troesch and Gollwitzer1996; Carcaterra & Ciappi Reference Carcaterra and Ciappi2004), as corroborated herein. However, despite the variety of reduced-order models available, very few experimental realizations of equivalently simplified structures have been completed to date. Our integrated experimental and theoretical study of what is arguably the simplest possible hydroelastic problem has illuminated the essential fundamental physics while showcasing its richness, and may potentially serve as a foundation for more advanced studies in the field.
In particular, the present work has focused on an undamped simple harmonic oscillator with a hemispherical nose to minimize the total number of parameters in the problem. However, both the one- and two-way coupled theoretical formulations presented can be immediately applied to a much broader range of problems. For instance, the one-way coupled model (3.17) can be easily extended to other nose geometries since it requires as input only the knowledge of the rigid impactor dynamics. Given an arbitrary axisymmetric nose geometry, one may perform experiments with a rigid impactor to obtain ${C}_{F}$ and substitute the result into (3.17) to predict the peak force for an elastic design. While we have used theoretical results available for rigid spherical impactors (Shiffman & Spencer Reference Shiffman and Spencer1945b), equally good (or better) predictions can be made by directly using a fit to the collapsed data presented in figure 3(b). Furthermore, by suitably adapting the more general ordinary differential equation formulation presented in (3.7) and (3.8), one can make predictions for nonlinear structural elements or explore cases outside of the ‘heavy’ nose limit where explicit two-way coupling plays a more prominent role. Continuous structures may also be analysed in the present framework using standard lumped-mass modelling approaches, and in many instances very few modes need to be resolved for faithful representations of the dynamics of otherwise complex structures (Piro & Maki Reference Piro and Maki2013). While significant progress has been made in high-fidelity coupled simulations of hydroelastic problems over the past several years, the reduced-order models presented herein are (in contrast) extraordinarily efficient to compute and may be particularly valuable in early design phases and in interpreting experimental and computational results.
Supplementary movies
Supplementary movies are available at https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2023.820.
Acknowledgements
J.T.A. and D.M.H. acknowledge the support of the Brown Design Workshop and JEPIS staff for use of their tensile testing equipment and advice regarding impactor fabrication. We also thank P. Guduru and members of the Experimental Solid Mechanics Laboratory for advice regarding stiffness testing.
Funding
J.T.A. and D.M.H. acknowledge funding from the Office of Naval Research (ONR N00014-21-1-2816). J.L.B. and N.B.S. acknowledge funding from the Naval Undersea Warfare Center In-House Laboratory Independent Research program, monitored by Dr E. Magliula.
Declaration of interests
The authors report no conflict of interest.
Data accessibility
The authors declare that all data supporting the findings of this study are available within the paper and supplementary datasets at https://github.com/harrislab-brown/WaterEntrySHO. Any additional data is available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Appendix A. Impactor details
A.1. Impactor fabrication
The slender flexible axisymmetric impactor is designed with an overall diameter of 44.45 mm and length of approximately 220 mm. All parts are machined from ASTM 6061-T6 aluminium except for the flexure spring elements which are laser-cut from acetal plastic and the noses for experiments with $\alpha =0.12$, which are 3-D printed out of photopolymer resin (Formlabs Clear Resin V4) on a Formlabs Form V2 machine. All aluminium components are anodized black according to MIL 8625 except for the parts which hold the flexure spring elements which are left uncoated to aid visualization. The impactor body contains a cavity into which the accelerometer is rigidly mounted using a threaded locking ring. An end cap with an O-ring ensures the body is water tight and contains an embedded steel sphere for dropping from the electromagnet. The flexure spring assembly features three flexure spring elements as shown in figure 1(c) which are bolted to triangular aluminum components. For the experiments with $k=4.29$, 7.80 and $13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$, the flexure beam length $L$ is 18 mm, the material thickness $b$ is 6.78 mm and the beam height $h$ is varied from approximately 0.5–1.5 mm to achieve the different stiffness values. Fillets with 1 mm radius are applied at the beam connection points in order to reduce the stress concentration and enable the flexures to survive the large shock as the impactor collides with the bottom of the tank. For the high stiffness experiments with $k=760\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$, the flexure beams are significantly shortened with $h/L \approx 1/3$. For the $k=21\,600\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$ experiments, the flexure elements are simply a solid plate of acetal plastic with the mounting holes cut out. The flexure spring assembly threads into the impactor body at one end and bolts to the nose at the other end. Hemispherical nose pieces weighing 0.029 kg are 3-D printed with $R=22.23$ and 29.64 mm for the $\alpha =0.12$ experiments. An aluminium nose piece weighing 0.126 kg with $R=22.23$ mm is fabricated for the $\sigma =0.24$ experiments. The nose pieces are each attached to an aluminium carrier weighing 0.033 kg which features mounting holes for the flexure elements. The fully assembled impactor body weighs 0.514 kg and the flexure elements typically weigh 0.020 kg for the low stiffness experiments and 0.040 kg for the high stiffness experiments, which we assume is split evenly between the body and nose masses. The slight mass variations due to the flexure elements are taken into account when calculating the ${R}_{F}$ value and non-dimensional maximum impact force for a given experiment. For the equivalent rigid experiments, additional aluminium noses are fabricated which thread directly into the impactor body in place of the flexure spring assembly. When possible, the lengths of the rigid noses are chosen so that the total impactor mass is the same as in the flexible experiments.
A.2. Characterization of impactor flexibility
The flexible impactors with $k=4.29$, 7.80 and $13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$ are tested in an Instron 5924 tensile testing machine with a 500 N load cell at a displacement rate of $1\ {\rm mm}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$ to a total displacement of 4 mm. Force is measured during both the compression and subsequent extension in order to observe the hysteresis of the structure. The stiffness values $k$ are determined by linear regression fitting of the force data. For the high stiffness cases with $k=760$ and $21\,600\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$, an accurate displacement curve cannot be directly obtained from the Instron machine because the impactor stiffness is comparable to the machine frame stiffness; instead the stiffness is estimated through experimental modal testing. The impactor is hung from a weak bungee such that the vertical translation mode has a low frequency (0.6 Hz) and the axial flexible mode of the impactor is excited by applying a longitudinal impulse with a rubber-tipped hammer. The acceleration of the impactor body is recorded and the natural frequency – from which the axial mode stiffness is calculated – is extracted by fitting a damped sinusoid to the data. This set-up is also used with the low stiffness impactors ($k=4.29$, 7.80 and $13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$) and the decay rate of the fit sinusoid is used to estimate the damping ratio: $\zeta = 0.007 \pm 0.001$. The natural frequencies of the low stiffness impactors obtained from experimental modal testing suggest slightly higher stiffness values than obtained via quasistatic testing, possibly due to rate-dependent material behaviour, which would help to explain the underprediction of the two-way coupled model in figure 4(a). However, we choose to report the values from quasistatic testing since this is a more direct and independent measurement of the stiffness. Computational modal analysis simulations are completed in Autodesk Fusion 360 and used to inform the design of the low stiffness impactors so that only the axial mode is excited during impact and they behave like simple harmonic oscillators. For the flexible impactors with $k=4.29$, 7.80 and $13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$, the simulations predict that the first harmonics (bending of the flexure springs) always have at least 142 % higher natural frequency than the axial fundamental mode. The simplified flexure beam theory model (Judy Reference Judy1994) supports this finding; the translational stiffness of the flexure element corresponding to tension/compression of the beams is larger than the axial mode stiffness by a factor which scales like $L^2/h^2$. Similarly, the translational stiffness of the flexure element corresponding to the other bending mode of its beams is larger by a factor which scales like $b^2/h^2$. For the high stiffness impactors ($k=760$ and $21\,600\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$), the design is less rigorous as the fundamental mode involves bending of the flexures. Nevertheless, the acceleration data during impact confirms that the axial mode is primarily excited due to the axial nature of the loading: the maximum off-axis vibrations during impact (measured in radial directions) always remain less than 21 % of the maximum axial acceleration, although are typically no more than 5 %.
Appendix B. Impactor speed
We report the impactor speed as a function of time in figure 7 for rigid and flexible experiments with $V=4\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$ and $R=22.23$ mm. For the flexible cases, $k= 4.29$, 7.80 and $13.98\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$, and $\alpha =0.12$. The impactor speed is obtained by integrating the acceleration data in figure 2(a) with a trapezoidal rule and the initial speeds from the camera measurements. Since the acceleration data is quite repeatable, the variation between trials in figure 7 is mainly attributed to the variation in measured impactor speed at the moment of impact.
Appendix C. Influence of form drag
We modify the Shiffman & Spencer added mass function $\textrm {d}m/\textrm {d}\kern 0.05em x$ as shown in the inset plot in figure 8(b) in order to match the experimental impact force profile for the rigid impactor (figure 3b) at later non-dimensional times and hence account for the contribution of form drag. This change improves the agreement between the predicted and experimentally measured peak impact acceleration as shown in figure 8(a), particularly at low ${R}_{F}$. The change in the prediction for the time of the peak acceleration is less pronounced, as shown in figure 8(b).
Appendix D. Influence of impactor preload
Since the elastic mode of the impactor is not constrained during free fall, the impactor can experience a preloaded impact in cases where the free-fall oscillations persist at the moment of impact such that $\delta (0) \neq 0$. Although we cannot reliably measure the nose displacement in our current experimental set-up, we expect that at the moment of impact, the nose may be stretched or compressed by a maximum distance associated with its initial gravitational extension
Additional compression that might arise from aerodynamic effects during free fall are negligible for our experimental parameters. For the experimental case in which we observe the most significant effects due to the oscillation phase at impact ($V=2\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}, \alpha =0.24, k=4.29\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$), the displacement due to the nose weight is $\delta _{grav}=0.39$ mm. Hence, assuming no damping during the free fall, in the most ‘extreme’ cases the nose would have a positive or negative displacement of 0.39 mm at the moment of impact, with zero nose velocity relative to the body. By appropriately modifying the initial conditions based on $\delta (0) = \pm 0.39$ mm and $\dot {\delta }(0)=0$, we use the flexible added mass model in (3.7) and (3.8) to predict the impact acceleration and compare with the experimental data for the case of $\alpha =0.24$, $V=2\ {\rm m}\ {\rm s}^{-1}$ and $k=4.29\ {\rm N}\ {\rm mm}^{-1}$. The resulting acceleration curves in figure 9 successfully bound the experimental data, and demonstrate that the predicted peak deceleration depends on the preload. For these parameters, the prestretched case experiences increased deceleration during impact while the precompressed case experiences reduced deceleration. The experimental curve more closely matches the prestretched case suggesting that $\delta (0)<0$ for these experiments.