Abstract

Based on the migratory phenomenon of the puffer and the cone-shaped structures on its skin, the effects of spinal height and tilt angle on the drag reduction characteristics is presented by numerical simulation in this paper. The results show that the trend of total drag reduction efficiency changes from slow growth to a remarkable decline, while the viscous drag reduction efficiency changes from an obvious increase to steady growth. The total and viscous drag reduction efficiencies are 19.5% and 31.8%, respectively. In addition, with the increase in tilt angle, the total drag reduction efficiency decreases gradually; the viscous drag reduction efficiency first increases and then decreases, finally tending to be stable; and the total and viscous drag reduction efficiency reaches 20.7% and 26.7%, respectively. The flow field results indicate that the pressure drag mainly originates at the front row of the spines and that the total pressure drag can be effectively controlled by reducing the former pressure drag. With the increase in low-speed fluid and the reduction in the near-wall fluid velocity gradient, the viscous drag can be weakened. Nevertheless, the drag reduction effect is achieved only when the decrement of viscous drag is greater than the increment of pressure drag. This work can serve as a theoretical basis for optimizing the structure and distribution parameters of spines on bionic non-smooth surfaces.

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