On the noise generation and unsteady performance of combined heaving and pitching foils

Bioinspir Biomim. 2023 May 30;18(4). doi: 10.1088/1748-3190/acd59d.

Abstract

A transient two-dimensional acoustic boundary element solver is coupled to a potential flow boundary element solver via Powell's acoustic analogy to determine the acoustic emission of isolated hydrofoils performing biologically-inspired motions. The flow-acoustic boundary element framework is validated against experimental and asymptotic solutions for the noise produced by canonical vortex-body interactions. The numerical framework then characterizes the noise production of an oscillating foil, which is a simple representation of a fish caudal fin. A rigid NACA 0012 hydrofoil is subjected to combined heaving and pitching motions for Strouhal numbers (0.03<St<1) based on peak-to-peak amplitudes and chord-based reduced frequencies (0.125<f∗<1) that span the parameter space of many swimming fish species. A dipolar acoustic directivity is found for all motions, frequencies, and amplitudes considered, and the peak noise level increases with both the reduced frequency and the Strouhal number. A combined heaving and pitching motion produces less noise than either a purely pitching or purely heaving foil at a fixed reduced frequency and amplitude of motion. Correlations of the lift and power coefficients with the peak root-mean-square acoustic pressure levels are determined, which could be utilized to develop long-range, quiet swimmers.

Keywords: boundary element method; hydro-acoustics; swimming noise generation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Fishes*
  • Motion
  • Swimming*