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Biomechanics of propulsion and drag in front crawl swimming Huub Toussaint Institute for Fundamental and Clinical Human Movement Sciences Vrije Universiteit,

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Presentation on theme: "Biomechanics of propulsion and drag in front crawl swimming Huub Toussaint Institute for Fundamental and Clinical Human Movement Sciences Vrije Universiteit,"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Biomechanics of propulsion and drag in front crawl swimming Huub Toussaint Institute for Fundamental and Clinical Human Movement Sciences Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, Holland www.ifkb.nl/B4/indexsw.html H_M_Toussaint@fbw.vu.nl

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4 Buoyancy Weight Drag Propulsion

5 How is propulsion generated? Pushing water backwards

6 Viewpoints:

7 Front crawl kinematics Pushing water backwards?

8 Hand functions as hydrofoil

9 Hydrofoil subjected to flow

10 Hand has hydrofoil properties

11 Lift and drag force

12 Adapt  to direct F p forward

13 Quasi-steady analysis

14 Quasi-steady analysis: Combining flow channel data with hand velocity data

15 MAD-system

16 Propulsion: Results Quasi- steady analysis vs MAD-system

17 Does the quasi-steady assumption fail? How to proceed? A brief digression The aerodynamics of insect flight

18 ‘The bumblebee that cannot fly’ l Quasi-steady analysis cannot account for required lift forces l Hence, there must be unsteady, lift-enhancing mechanisms

19 Delayed Stall Unsteady lift-enhancing mechanism Add rotation…. and visualize flow

20 Hovering robomoth

21 3D leading-edge vortex

22 Delayed stall: the 3D version l Leading-edge vortex stabilized by axial flow l Can account for ~ 50% of required lift force l Key features: –Stalling: high angle of attack (~ 45º) –Axial flow: wing rotation leads to an axial velocity / pressure gradient –Rotational acceleration (?)

23 So what’s the connection?

24 ...back to front crawl swimming l Short strokes & rotations: unsteady effects probably play an important role l Explore by flow visualization l Our first attempt: –Attach tufts to lower arm and hand to record instantaneous flow directions

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26 Outsweep

27 Accelerated flow

28 The pumping effect arm rotation  pressure gradient  axial flow

29 Toussaint et al, 2002

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31 Buoyancy Weight Drag Propulsion

32 Drag:

33 ship v

34 Divergent waves Transverse waves ship

35 Effect of speed on wave length Wave drag 70% of total drag (of ship)

36 Length of surface wave Hull speed for given length (L) of ship:

37 Height of swimmer 2 m: Hull speed for a swimmer “Pieter” swims > 2 m/s…..

38 Wave drag as % of total drag 12%

39 Summary  humans swim faster than ‘hull’ speed  wave drag matters at competitive swimming speeds but is with 12% far less than that for ships where it is 70% of total drag

40 Interaction length of ship (L) with wave length ( )

41 hull speed reinforcement cancellation reinforcement

42 hull speed

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44 Could non-stationary effects reduce wave drag?

45 Takamoto M., Ohmichi H. & Miyashita M. (1985)

46 ‘Technique’ reducing bow wave formation?  Glide phase: arm functions as “bulbous bow” reducing height of the bow wave  Non-stationarity of rostral pressure point prohibits full build-up of the bow wave ship

47 With whole stroke swimming speed increases about 5% without a concomitant increase in stern-wave height. The leg action might disrupt the pressure pattern at the stern prohibiting a full build up of the stern wave

48 THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION


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