Ya Wen Lee, Adam Hazim Bin Megat Iskandar Hashim, Franziska Conrad, Ahmad Fazlizan, Kok-Hoe Wong
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Exploring biomimicry in wind and hydrokinetic turbine design: bridging nature and engineering.
Nature has remained one of the key sources of inspiration for human technology. While striking for higher efficiency, design improvements in power-generating turbines have started to reach a saturation point. Biomimicry- learning from nature, has great potential for significant performance improvements. This paper provides a comprehensive review of the current trends in research of bioinspired technology on wind and hydrokinetic turbines. The aim is to identify the most effective bioinspired methods and the factors affecting the turbine performance. Various methods adopted are inspired by animals and plants and their interaction with fluid to enhance aero/hydrodynamic properties. These promising methods include the humpback whale tubercle and bird wing, where flow characteristics can be improved such as delaying the stall conditions and suppressing flow separation. Methods inspired by dragonfly wings, sea pen leaves, and plant seeds showed substantial merit for operating at low wind speeds, as a better glide ratio, enabling them to be suitable for low wind speed turbines. Furthermore, additional surface and structural modifications are explored, and their contributions are discussed in this paper. Various biomimicry methods were compared and critically analysed. This paper closes with a brief overview of future development options.
期刊介绍:
Bioinspiration & Biomimetics publishes research involving the study and distillation of principles and functions found in biological systems that have been developed through evolution, and application of this knowledge to produce novel and exciting basic technologies and new approaches to solving scientific problems. It provides a forum for interdisciplinary research which acts as a pipeline, facilitating the two-way flow of ideas and understanding between the extensive bodies of knowledge of the different disciplines. It has two principal aims: to draw on biology to enrich engineering and to draw from engineering to enrich biology.
The journal aims to include input from across all intersecting areas of both fields. In biology, this would include work in all fields from physiology to ecology, with either zoological or botanical focus. In engineering, this would include both design and practical application of biomimetic or bioinspired devices and systems. Typical areas of interest include:
Systems, designs and structure
Communication and navigation
Cooperative behaviour
Self-organizing biological systems
Self-healing and self-assembly
Aerial locomotion and aerospace applications of biomimetics
Biomorphic surface and subsurface systems
Marine dynamics: swimming and underwater dynamics
Applications of novel materials
Biomechanics; including movement, locomotion, fluidics
Cellular behaviour
Sensors and senses
Biomimetic or bioinformed approaches to geological exploration.