Drag on a partially immersed sphere at the capillary scale
ORAL
Abstract
Characterization of the drag on bodies in a background flow represents one of the most timeless and practical applications of fluid mechanics. For the case of objects partially immersed at a free surface, most prior work focuses on large scales where the effects of surface tension are negligible. In the present work, we use a custom benchtop flume to investigate the drag force on centimetric objects in steady flow constrained at the air-water interface. Surface profile reconstructions and particle image velocimetry measurements are presented in conjunction with direct force measurements. The experimental measurements are compared directly to numerical simulations performed using a variational multi-scale, mixed interface-capturing/interface-tracking formulation. In general, we observe that the drag force steadily increases with submergence, reaching a peak value which significantly exceeds the fully submerged case. Implications for the design of surface microrobots and other applications will be discussed.
–
Presenters
-
Robert Hunt
Brown University
Authors
-
Robert Hunt
Brown University
-
Ze Zhao
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
-
Eli Silver
Brown University, School of Engineering, Brown University
-
Jinhui Yan
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
-
Yuri Bazilevs
Brown University
-
Daniel Harris
Brown University, Brown University, Department of Engineering