Bioinspired whisker arrays can work as antennae to detect sources of flow disturbances under water or in the air

This method relies on the time differences of the signal exciting the different whiskers. The underlying principle of source detection could also explain how the sea lions use their whiskers to track the path of their prey, by leaving hydrodynamic disturbances in their wake while swimming.

Using the specially equipped water tank in City’s aeronautical engineering laboratory for sea lion simulations, Professor Bruecker and his team have tested the artificial whiskers to respond to different hydrodynamic stimuli and developed the mathematical codes for the source localization.

Professor Bruecker, City’s Royal Academy of Engineering Research Chair in Nature-Inspired Sensing and Flow Control for Sustainable Transport and Sir Richard Olver BAE Systems Chair for Aeronautical Engineering, has published a study of his findings in Nature: Scientific Reports, in a paper titled, “Sea lions could use multilateration localization for object tracking as tested with bio-inspired whisker arrays.”

As a further extension of their work, they have equipped an aerofoil with arrays of small whisker hairs to transfer the research to Aeronautical applications.

This technology can help to monitor flow over the aerofoil online and detect unusual signatures in the flow which might stem from the wake of other aircraft or drones.

The aerofoil was presented at the recent LXLASER 2022 conference and is being used for further tests at City’s wind-tunnel in the Handley Page Lab.

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