(Press-News.org) Contact information: Jason Socrates Bardi
jbardi@aip.org
240-535-4954
American Institute of Physics
Smooth sailing: Rough surfaces that can reduce drag
Modeling structures that trap air under water and could one day lead to more energy-efficient ships described in the journal 'Physics of Fluids'
WASHINGTON, D.C. Jan. 17, 2014 -- From the sleek hulls of racing yachts to Michael Phelps' shaved legs, most objects that move through the water quickly are also smooth. But researchers from UCLA have found that bumpiness can sometimes be better.
"A properly designed rough surface, contrary to our intuition, can reduce skin-friction drag," said John Kim, a professor in the mechanical and aerospace engineering department at UCLA. Kim and his colleagues modeled the fluid flow between two surfaces covered with tiny ridges. They found that even in turbulent conditions the rough surface reduced the drag created by the friction of flowing water. The researchers report their findings in the journal Physics of Fluids.
The idea of using a rough surface for reduced drag had been explored before, but resulted in limited success. More recently scientists have begun experimenting with rough surfaces that are also extremely difficult to wet, a property called superhydrophobicity. In theory this means that the surfaces can trap air bubbles, creating a hydrodynamic cushion, but in practice they often lose their air cushions in chaotic flows.
The ULCA team chose to model a superhydrophobic surface design that another group of researchers at UCLA had already observed could keep air pockets entrapped, even in turbulent conditions. The surface was covered with small ridges aligned in the direction of flow.
The researchers modeled both laminar and turbulent flows, and unexpectedly found that the drag-reduction was larger in turbulent conditions. The irregular fluctuations and swirling vortices in turbulent flows on smooth surfaces generally increase drag, Kim explained. However, the air cushion created by the superhydrophobic ridges altered the turbulent patterns near the surface, reducing their effect, he said.
The team expects insights gleaned from their numerical simulations to help further refine the design of rough, drag-reducing surfaces. Further down the line, such surfaces might cover the undersides of cargo vessels and passenger ships. "It could lead to significant energy savings and reduction of greenhouse gas emissions," Kim said.
###
The paper, "A numerical study of the effects of superhydrophobic surface on skin-friction drag in turbulent channel flow," authored by Hyunwook Park, Hyungmin Park, and John Kim, appears in the journal Physics of Fluids. See: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4819144
ABOUT THE JOURNAL
Physics of Fluids is devoted to the publication of original theoretical, computational, and experimental contributions to the dynamics of gases, liquids, and complex or multiphase fluids. See: http://pof.aip.org
Smooth sailing: Rough surfaces that can reduce drag
Modeling structures that trap air under water and could one day lead to more energy-efficient ships described in the journal 'Physics of Fluids'
2014-01-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
At arm's length: The plasticity of depth judgment
2014-01-17
At arm's length: The plasticity of depth judgment
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — We need to reach for things, so a connection between arm length and our ability to judge depth accurately may make sense. Given that we grow throughout childhood, it may also ...
Feast or fancy? Black widows shake for love
2014-01-17
Feast or fancy? Black widows shake for love
A team of Simon Fraser University biologists has found that courting male black widow spiders shake their abdomens to produce carefully pitched vibrations and avoid potential attacks by females – who otherwise ...
NASA tracks soggy System 94S over Western Australia
2014-01-17
NASA tracks soggy System 94S over Western Australia
NASA's Terra satellite saw the System 94S, a tropical low, still holding together as it continued moving inland from the Northern Territory into Western Australia today, January 17.
The tropical low pressure system ...
45 years on: How serotonin makes schistosome parasites move
2014-01-17
45 years on: How serotonin makes schistosome parasites move
Schistosoma mansoni and its close relatives are parasitic flatworms that affect millions worldwide and kill an estimated 250,000 people a year. A study published on January 16 in PLOS Pathogens identifies ...
Geography plays a major role in access to pediatric kidney transplantation in the US
2014-01-17
Geography plays a major role in access to pediatric kidney transplantation in the US
Depending on where they live, kids may get an organ in a matter of weeks or have to wait several years
Washington, DC (January 16, 2014) — A new study has revealed large geographic ...
Renewable chemical ready for biofuels scale-up
2014-01-17
Renewable chemical ready for biofuels scale-up
MADISON, Wis. — Using a plant-derived chemical, University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers have developed a process for creating a concentrated stream of sugars that's ripe with possibility for biofuels. ...
Soil production breaks geologic speed record
2014-01-17
Soil production breaks geologic speed record
Geologic time is shorthand for slow-paced. But new measurements from steep mountaintops in New Zealand show that rock can transform into soil more than twice as fast as previously believed possible.
The findings were published ...
Genomes of modern dogs and wolves provide new insights on domestication
2014-01-17
Genomes of modern dogs and wolves provide new insights on domestication
Dogs and wolves evolved from a common ancestor between 9,000 and 34,000 years ago, before humans transitioned to agricultural societies, according to an analysis of modern dog and wolf ...
New discovery on Giant Cell Arteritis sheds light on cause
2014-01-17
New discovery on Giant Cell Arteritis sheds light on cause
New research from Queen Mary University of London has revealed – for the first time – how the condition Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA) may be caused by a certain group of white blood cells called ...
Traditional Chinese medicines stall progression of diabetes
2014-01-17
Traditional Chinese medicines stall progression of diabetes
Clinical trial found herbs comparable to prescriptions for controlling prediabetes
Chevy Chase, MD—Traditional Chinese herbal medicines hold promise for slowing the progression from prediabetes to ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
‘Revolutionary’ seafloor fiber sensing reveals how falling ice drives glacial retreat in Greenland
Two-dose therapy for S. aureus bloodstream infections on par with standard treatment
Quitting smoking is associated with recovery from other addictions
Overhaul global food systems to avert worsening land crisis: Scientists
ASU scientists uncover new fossils – and a new species of ancient human ancestor
Would you like that coffee with iron?
County-level cervical cancer screening coverage and differences in incidence and mortality
Gauging the magnitude of missed opportunity for ovarian cancer prevention
Counties with low rates of cervical cancer screening see higher rates of incidence and death
Years after an earthquake, rivers still carry the mountains downstream
Discovery of new fossils — and a new species of ancient human ancestor — reveals insights on evolution
Falling ice drives glacial retreat in Greenland
UMass Amherst-led team finds rapidly changing river patterns in High-mountain Asia pose a challenge for region’s energy future
New compound disrupts survival pathways in aromatase inhibitor-resistant breast cancer cells
Arabic and Czech translations, more than 4,000 new concepts boost global interoperability in latest LOINC® release
New treatment eliminates bladder cancer in 82% of patients
Finding the shadows in a fusion system faster with AI
Weekend habits linked to new sleep disorder trend: ‘Social Apnea’
FAU lands $700,000 U.S. EPA grant to monitor water quality in Lake Okeechobee
WSU team unlocks biological process underlying coho die-offs
Chungnam National University researchers develop next-gen zinc batteries: artificial polymer nanolayers improve zinc battery stability
$500 million fundraising goal surpassed by The University of Texas at San Antonio two years early
Illinois team updates state threatened, endangered plant species rankings
AASM is accepting abstracts and award entries for Sleep Medicine Disruptors 2025
Researchers re-engineer AI language model to target previously ‘undruggable’ disease proteins
Gaia’s variable stars: a new map of the stellar life cycle
AI web browser assistants raise serious privacy concerns
AI-enhanced infrared thermography for reliable detection of temperature patterns in calves
Now you see me, now you don’t: how subtle ‘sponsored content’ on social media tricks us into viewing ads
New method loads mRNA into exosomes in 10 minutes—just mix and go
[Press-News.org] Smooth sailing: Rough surfaces that can reduce dragModeling structures that trap air under water and could one day lead to more energy-efficient ships described in the journal 'Physics of Fluids'