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Keywords = bionic convex domes

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19 pages, 3081 KB  
Article
Design of a Bio-Inspired Anti-Erosion Structure for a Water Hydraulic Valve Core: An Experimental Study
by Haihang Wang, He Xu, Yonghui Zhang, Siqing Chen, Zitong Zhao and Junlong Chen
Biomimetics 2019, 4(3), 63; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics4030063 - 6 Sep 2019
Cited by 24 | Viewed by 7391
Abstract
Animals and plants have numerous active protections for adapting to the complex and severe living environments, providing endless inspiration for extending the service life of materials and machines. Conch, a marine animal living near the coast and chronically suffering from the erosion of [...] Read more.
Animals and plants have numerous active protections for adapting to the complex and severe living environments, providing endless inspiration for extending the service life of materials and machines. Conch, a marine animal living near the coast and chronically suffering from the erosion of sand in water, has adapted to the condition through its anti-erosion conch shell. Romanesco broccoli, a plant whose inflorescence is self-similar in character, has a natural fractal bud’s form. Coupling the convex domes on the conch shell and the fractal structure of Romanesco broccoli, a novel valve core structure of a water hydraulic valve was designed in this paper to improve the particle erosion resistance and valve core’s service life. Three models were built to compare the effect among the normal structure, bionic structure, and multi-source coupling bionic structures, and were coined using 3D printing technology. A 3D printed water hydraulic valve was manufactured to simulate the working condition of a valve core under sand erosion in water flow, and capture the experimental videos of the two-phase flow. Furthermore, based on the water hydraulic platform and one-camera-six-mirror 3D imaging subsystem, the experiment system was established and used to compare the performance of the three different valve cores. As a result, the results showed that the coupling bionic structure could effectively improve the anti-erosion property of the valve core and protect the sealing face on the valve core from wear. This paper presents a novel way of combining advantages from both animal (function bionic) and plant (shape bionic) in one component design. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Selected Papers from ICBE2019)
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11 pages, 2882 KB  
Communication
Application of Finite Element Analysis in Modeling of Bionic Harrowing Discs
by Benard Chirende, Jian Qiao Li and Wonder Vheremu
Biomimetics 2019, 4(3), 61; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics4030061 - 3 Sep 2019
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 4107
Abstract
Ansys software was used to carry out three-dimensional finite element analysis (FEA) for biomimetic design of harrowing discs based on the body surface morphology of soil burrowing animals like dung beetle (Dicranocara deschodt) which have non-smooth units such as convex domes [...] Read more.
Ansys software was used to carry out three-dimensional finite element analysis (FEA) for biomimetic design of harrowing discs based on the body surface morphology of soil burrowing animals like dung beetle (Dicranocara deschodt) which have non-smooth units such as convex domes and concave dips. The main objective was to find out the effects of different biomimetic surface designs on reducing soil resistance hence the horizontal force acting on the harrowing disc during soil deformation was determined. In this FEA, soil deformation was based on the Drucker–Prager elastic–perfectly plastic model which was applied only at the lowest disc harrowing speed of 4.4 km/h which is within the limits of model. The material non-linearity of soil was addressed using an incremental technique and inside each step, the Newton–Raphson iteration method was utilized. The model results were analyzed and then summation of horizontal forces acting on the soil-disc interface was also done. An experiment was then conducted in an indoor soil bin to validate the FEA results. The FEA results are generally in agreement with those of the indoor experiment with a difference of less than or equal to the acceptable 10% with an average difference of 4%. Overall, convex bionic units gave the highest resistance reduction of 19.5% from 1526.87 N to 1228.38 N compared to concave bionic units. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Selected Papers from ICBE2019)
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22 pages, 24190 KB  
Article
Alternative Design of Double-Suction Centrifugal Pump to Reduce the Effects of Silt Erosion
by Jing Dong, Zhongdong Qian, Biraj Singh Thapa, Bhola Thapa and Zhiwei Guo
Energies 2019, 12(1), 158; https://doi.org/10.3390/en12010158 - 3 Jan 2019
Cited by 33 | Viewed by 6100
Abstract
Large amounts of sediment in the Himalayan rivers causes severe silt erosion to the hydraulic machinery operating along these rivers. In this study, the effects of silt characteristics on the silt-erosion characteristics of a double-suction centrifugal pump was studied and the anti-erosion property [...] Read more.
Large amounts of sediment in the Himalayan rivers causes severe silt erosion to the hydraulic machinery operating along these rivers. In this study, the effects of silt characteristics on the silt-erosion characteristics of a double-suction centrifugal pump was studied and the anti-erosion property of bionic convex domes on silt erosion under these conditions was explored by using computational-fluid-dynamics methods, partly supported by a painted-blade erosion experiment. The results show that the silt size affects the erosion position and erosion strength, whereas the silt concentration mainly affects the erosion strength for the studied range. The bionic convex domes provide an effective solution to improve the silt erosion for most of the investigated silt-laden conditions by decreasing the erosion rate and the erosion area of the blade. The anti-erosion mechanism was studied combined with large eddy simulation. The analysis shows that the relative velocity of water around the blade surface is changed and the mass flow rate of silt particles hitting the blade is reduced by inducing swirling flows around the bionic convex domes. Full article
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