Passive Robotic Models of Propulsion by the Bodies and Caudal Fins of Fish

被引:75
|
作者
Lauder, George V. [1 ]
Flammang, Brooke [1 ]
Alben, Silas [2 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Museum Comparat Zool, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
[2] Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Math, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
SUNFISH LEPOMIS-MACROCHIRUS; BLUEGILL SUNFISH; DORSAL FIN; KINEMATICS; HYDRODYNAMICS; LOCOMOTION; STIFFNESS; MORPHOLOGY; DYNAMICS; SHARKS;
D O I
10.1093/icb/ics096
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Considerable progress in understanding the dynamics of fish locomotion has been made through studies of live fishes and by analyzing locomotor kinematics, muscle activity, and fluid dynamics. Studies of live fishes are limited, however, in their ability to control for parameters such as length, flexural stiffness, and kinematics. Keeping one of these factors constant while altering others in a repeatable manner is typically not possible, and it is difficult to make critical measurements such as locomotor forces and torques on live, freely-swimming fishes. In this article, we discuss the use of simple robotic models of flexing fish bodies during self-propulsion. Flexible plastic foils were actuated at the leading edge in a heave and/or pitch motion using a robotic flapping controller that allowed moving foils to swim at their self-propelled speed. We report unexpected non-linear effects of changing the length and stiffness of the foil, and analyze the effect of changing the shape of the trailing edge on self-propelled swimming speed and kinematics. We also quantify the structure of the wake behind swimming foils with volumetric particle image velocimetry, and describe the effect of flexible heterocercal and homocercal tail shapes on flow patterns in the wake. One key advantage of the considerable degree of control afforded by robotic devices and the use of simplified geometries is the facilitation of mathematical analyses and computational models, as illustrated by the application of an inviscid computational model to propulsion by a flapping foil. This model, coupled with experimental data, demonstrates an interesting resonance phenomenon in which swimming speed varies with foil length in an oscillatory manner. Small changes in length can have dramatic effects on swimming speed, and this relationship changes with flexural stiffness of the swimming foil.
引用
收藏
页码:576 / 587
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] A Dynamic Model for Robotic Fish with Flexible Pectoral Fins
    Behbahani, Sanaz Bazaz
    Wang, Jianxun
    Tan, Xiaobo
    2013 IEEE/ASME INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED INTELLIGENT MECHATRONICS (AIM): MECHATRONICS FOR HUMAN WELLBEING, 2013, : 1552 - 1557
  • [22] DYNAMIC MODELING OF ROBOTIC FISH WITH A FLEXIBLE CAUDAL FIN
    Wang, Jianxun
    McKinley, Philip K.
    Tan, Xiaobo
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASME 5TH ANNUAL DYNAMIC SYSTEMS AND CONTROL DIVISION CONFERENCE AND JSME 11TH MOTION AND VIBRATION CONFERENCE, DSCC 2012, VOL 2, 2012, : 203 - 212
  • [23] Numerical study on the turn maneuvering of a biomimetic robotic fish driven by pectoral fins in labriform mode under self-propulsion
    Feng, Yikun
    Su, Yumin
    PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 2025, 37 (01)
  • [24] Propulsion modeling of caudal fin driving system on balloon fish robot
    Haga M.
    Uchida M.
    Artificial Life and Robotics, 2017, 22 (01) : 10 - 16
  • [25] A STUDY OF 3D FLEXIBLE CAUDAL FIN FOR FISH PROPULSION
    Shi, Guangyu
    Xiao, Qing
    Zhu, Qiang
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASME 36TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OCEAN, OFFSHORE AND ARCTIC ENGINEERING, 2017, VOL 7A, 2017,
  • [26] Propulsion efficiency of bodies appended with multiple flapping fins: When more is less
    Bandyopadhyay, Promode R.
    Leinhos, Henry A.
    PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 2013, 25 (04)
  • [27] Analysis on a robotic fish propulsion by using flexible structure
    Yun, Dongwon
    Kyung, Jinho
    Kim, Kyung-Soo
    Kim, Soohyun
    OCEANS, 2012 - YEOSU, 2012,
  • [28] EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF HYBRID PROPULSION MECHANISM FOR ROBOTIC FISH
    Aly, Abdulrahman
    Omari, Mohamad
    Ghommem, Mehdi
    Romdhane, Lotfi
    PROCEEDINGS OF ASME 2022 FLUIDS ENGINEERING DIVISION SUMMER MEETING, FEDSM2022, VOL 1, 2022,
  • [29] Robotic Fish Locomotion & Propulsion in Marine Environment: A Survey
    Aminur, A. M. R. B.
    Hemakumar, B.
    Prasad, M. P. R.
    2018 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON POWER, ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT: TOWARDS SMART TECHNOLOGY (ICEPE), 2018,
  • [30] Bionic asymmetry:from amiiform fish to undulating robotic fins
    LOW K. H.
    Science Bulletin, 2009, (04) : 562 - 568