Wave-induced dynamics of flexible blades
M. Luhar, H. M. Nepf

TL;DR
This study combines experiments and numerical modeling to analyze how flexible aquatic vegetation blades respond to wave-induced flows, revealing key scaling laws and the impact of blade flexibility on hydrodynamic forces.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive experimental and numerical framework to understand wave-induced blade dynamics, highlighting the roles of the Cauchy number and excursion ratio, and identifies limitations of current models.
Findings
Flexible blades with high Cauchy number reduce hydrodynamic drag.
Different scaling laws apply depending on wave excursion size.
Unsteady vortex shedding may cause forces exceeding rigid blade predictions.
Abstract
We present an experimental and numerical study that describes the motion of flexible blades, scaled to be dynamically similar to natural aquatic vegetation, forced by wave-induced oscillatory flows. For the conditions tested, blade motion is governed primarily by two dimensionless variables: (i) the Cauchy number, , which represents the ratio of the hydrodynamic forcing to the restoring force due to blade stiffness, and (ii) the ratio of the blade length to the wave orbital excursion, . For flexible blades with , the relationship between drag and velocity can be described by two different scaling laws at the large- and small-excursion limits. For large excursions (), the flow resembles a unidirectional current and the scaling laws developed for steady-flow reconfiguration studies hold. For small excursions (), the beam equations may be linearized and a…
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