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      Bioinspired surfaces for turbulent drag reduction

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="d8087134e209">In this review, we discuss how superhydrophobic surfaces (SHSs) can provide friction drag reduction in turbulent flow. Whereas biomimetic SHSs are known to reduce drag in laminar flow, turbulence adds many new challenges. We first provide an overview on designing SHSs, and how these surfaces can cause slip in the laminar regime. We then discuss recent studies evaluating drag on SHSs in turbulent flow, both computationally and experimentally. The effects of streamwise and spanwise slip for canonical, structured surfaces are well characterized by direct numerical simulations, and several experimental studies have validated these results. However, the complex and hierarchical textures of scalable SHSs that can be applied over large areas generate additional complications. Many studies on such surfaces have measured no drag reduction, or even a drag increase in turbulent flow. We discuss how surface wettability, roughness effects and some newly found scaling laws can help explain these varied results. Overall, we discuss how, to effectively reduce drag in turbulent flow, an SHS should have: preferentially streamwise-aligned features to enhance favourable slip, a capillary resistance of the order of megapascals, and a roughness no larger than 0.5, when non-dimensionalized by the viscous length scale. </p><p id="d8087134e211">This article is part of the themed issue ‘Bioinspired hierarchically structured surfaces for green science’. </p>

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          Most cited references63

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          Capillarity and Wetting Phenomena

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            Natural and biomimetic artificial surfaces for superhydrophobicity, self-cleaning, low adhesion, and drag reduction

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              Effective slip in pressure-driven Stokes flow

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
                Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A
                The Royal Society
                1364-503X
                1471-2962
                June 27 2016
                August 06 2016
                June 27 2016
                August 06 2016
                : 374
                : 2073
                : 20160189
                Article
                10.1098/rsta.2016.0189
                4928507
                27354731
                92dfd32d-1f3a-499a-a96a-59ec49f0b7f0
                © 2016
                History

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