Publication Date:
2022
abstract:
The sharp increase in sailing speed experienced in the last decades has led yacht
engineering to face issues of fluid-elastic instability deriving from the interaction of a
'light' structure with the surrounding 'heavy' fluid flow at high speed. In this context, the
authors of this paper decided to undertake an experimental campaign to test a low mass-
ratio hydrofoil model to investigate flutter instability in CNR-INM towing tank in Rome.
The physical model is built as a segmented body to allow for a plain description of its
elastic properties: this choice makes the results suitable to be used for validation of
reduced-order analytical or numerical models. The model design methodology and the
experimental set-up are detailed along with the testing procedure, substantially based on
damping analysis, to identify the critical flutter speed. To have a first estimation of this
critical speed, the authors implemented an analytical reduced-order model by representing
the structure as a 2D spring-damper-mass system, and calculating the unsteady fluid loads
by means of Theodorsen theory.
Iris type:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Flutter; Fluid-Structure Interaction; Hydroelasticity; Experimental; Theodorsen
List of contributors: