Shark-skin surfaces for fluid-drag reduction in turbulent flow: a review

Author:

Dean Brian1,Bhushan Bharat1

Affiliation:

1. Nanoprobe Laboratory for Bio- and Nanotechnology and Biomimetics (NLBB), Ohio State University, 201 West 19th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210-1142, USA

Abstract

The skin of fast-swimming sharks exhibits riblet structures aligned in the direction of flow that are known to reduce skin friction drag in the turbulent-flow regime. Structures have been fabricated for study and application that replicate and improve upon the natural shape of the shark-skin riblets, providing a maximum drag reduction of nearly 10 per cent. Mechanisms of fluid drag in turbulent flow and riblet-drag reduction theories from experiment and simulation are discussed. A review of riblet-performance studies is given, and optimal riblet geometries are defined. A survey of studies experimenting with riblet-topped shark-scale replicas is also given. A method for selecting optimal riblet dimensions based on fluid-flow characteristics is detailed, and current manufacturing techniques are outlined. Due to the presence of small amounts of mucus on the skin of a shark, it is expected that the localized application of hydrophobic materials will alter the flow field around the riblets in some way beneficial to the goals of increased drag reduction.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

Reference50 articles.

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3. The Berlin oil channel for drag reduction research

4. Biological surfaces and their technological application—laboratory and flight experiments on drag reduction and separation control;Bechert D. W.;AIAA 28th Fluid Dynamics Conference, Snowmass Village, CO, 29 June–2 August,1997

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