87 research outputs found

    Review of Computational Fluid Dynamics Analysis in Biomimetic Applications for Underwater Vehicles

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    Biomimetics, which draws inspiration from nature, has emerged as a key approach in the development of underwater vehicles. The integration of this approach with computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has further propelled research in this field. CFD, as an effective tool for dynamic analysis, contributes significantly to understanding and resolving complex fluid dynamic problems in underwater vehicles. Biomimetics seeks to harness innovative inspiration from the biological world. Through the imitation of the structure, behavior, and functions of organisms, biomimetics enables the creation of efficient and unique designs. These designs are aimed at enhancing the speed, reliability, and maneuverability of underwater vehicles, as well as reducing drag and noise. CFD technology, which is capable of precisely predicting and simulating fluid flow behaviors, plays a crucial role in optimizing the structural design of underwater vehicles, thereby significantly enhancing their hydrodynamic and kinematic performances. Combining biomimetics and CFD technology introduces a novel approach to underwater vehicle design and unveils broad prospects for research in natural science and engineering applications. Consequently, this paper aims to review the application of CFD technology in the biomimicry of underwater vehicles, with a primary focus on biomimetic propulsion, biomimetic drag reduction, and biomimetic noise reduction. Additionally, it explores the challenges faced in this field and anticipates future advancements

    Bio-Inspired Robotics

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    Modern robotic technologies have enabled robots to operate in a variety of unstructured and dynamically-changing environments, in addition to traditional structured environments. Robots have, thus, become an important element in our everyday lives. One key approach to develop such intelligent and autonomous robots is to draw inspiration from biological systems. Biological structure, mechanisms, and underlying principles have the potential to provide new ideas to support the improvement of conventional robotic designs and control. Such biological principles usually originate from animal or even plant models, for robots, which can sense, think, walk, swim, crawl, jump or even fly. Thus, it is believed that these bio-inspired methods are becoming increasingly important in the face of complex applications. Bio-inspired robotics is leading to the study of innovative structures and computing with sensory–motor coordination and learning to achieve intelligence, flexibility, stability, and adaptation for emergent robotic applications, such as manipulation, learning, and control. This Special Issue invites original papers of innovative ideas and concepts, new discoveries and improvements, and novel applications and business models relevant to the selected topics of ``Bio-Inspired Robotics''. Bio-Inspired Robotics is a broad topic and an ongoing expanding field. This Special Issue collates 30 papers that address some of the important challenges and opportunities in this broad and expanding field

    生物模倣ソフト魚ロボットの研究開発

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    In nature, the environment varies from day to day. Through natural selection and competition law of survival of the fittest, the winning creatures survive and their species are able to retain and persist in nature. Based on this fact, creatures existent in nature have their unique features and advantages adapt to the surrounding environment. In recent years, many researches focused on the features of the creatures in nature have been done actively to clarify their morphology and functions and apply the morphology and functions to various fields. Among these researches, the development of the biomimetic robots based on mimicking the creature’s structures and functions has become an active field in robotics recently. In the research, the development of biomimetic robotic fish is focused. So far, there are many researches on biomimetic robotic fish, but improvement on motion performances and efficiency is still an important issue for robot development. Specially, on the biomimetic soft robotic fish utilizing the flexibility of fishes, the developments have been done by the trial and error approach. That is, the design and control method of soft robotic fish has not been established currently. Therefore, it motives us to investigate the design and control of soft robotic fish by numerical simulation that takes into account the interaction between flexible structure and surrounding fluid to develop the biomimetic soft robotic fish with high performance. In order to develop the biomimetic soft robotic fish with high performance, the basic design method and corresponding numerical simulation system are firstly proposed and constructed in this dissertation. Then, based on finite element method (FEM), modelling of soft robotic fish by mimicking the soft structure and driving mechanism of fishes is carried out. The propulsion motion and propulsive force of the soft robotic fish are investigated through two kinds of numerical analyses. One is the modal and transient analysis considering the surrounding fluid as acoustic fluid. The propulsion mode and amplitude of the propulsion motion of soft robotic fish corresponding directly to the propulsion mechanism and motion performance of the robotic fish can be investigated. The other is the fluid-structure interaction (FSI) analysis. The interaction between soft robot structure and surrounding fluid including the dissipation due to fluid viscosity and influence of wake performance around the soft robotic fish are taken into account. From FSI analysis, the hydrodynamic performances of the soft robotic fish can be obtained for investigating its propulsion motion. It is possible to further improve the performance of the soft robotic fish through its design and control based on FSI analysis. Besides, based on coupling analysis by using acoustic fluid, the turning motion control of the soft robotic fish is investigated by its propulsion modes in the fluid. In order to investigate the feasibility of modelling method and numerical simulation analysis on design and control of the biomimetic soft robotic fish, the performance evaluation is carried out by comparison between the simulation and experiment on an actual prototype. Finally, the optimization and improvement are performed for developing the biomimetic soft robotic fish with higher performance based on verified coupling analysis considering the fluid as acoustic fluid, and corresponding performance evaluation on new robot prototype is presented. The performance improvement of the soft robotic fish is confirmed through the new robot prototype. The dissertation consists of six chapters and the main contents are shown as follows. Chapter 1 is an introduction. The background and relative previous work about biomimetic soft robotic fish are briefly reviewed. It summarizes the current research status and problems of biomimetic soft robotic fish, and describes the purposes of this research. Chapter 2 presents the design method, procedures and numerical simulation system in the present research for developing the biomimetic soft robotic fish with high performance. Different from previous development method, our purpose is how to design and control the soft robotic fish by utilizing interaction between the flexible structure and surrounding fluid effectively based on numerical simulations. Therefore, it is necessary to model a fish-like soft robot structure including soft actuators and an enclosed fluid. Besides, by the numerical analysis considering the interaction between flexible structure and fluid, the fish-like propulsion motion should be realized and established, and then the robot structure and control inputs are needed to be optimized for performance improvement. In order to meet these requirements of designing and developing the optimal soft robotic fish, the design method based on modelling, simulation analysis and improvement is presented and the numerical simulation system for soft robotic fish is built. In the simulation system, modelling of soft robotic fish, modal and transient analysis considering the enclosed fluid as acoustic fluid are firstly described based on FEM to realize the fish-like propulsion motion with large amplitude for the soft robotic fish. Then, the FSI analysis is performed to describe and establish the hydrodynamic performances of the soft robotic fish. Based on this numerical simulation system, it is possible to develop the biomimetic soft robotic fish with high performance effectively by optimization of design and control of the soft robotic fish. Chapter 3 describes the modelling and numerical analysis of biomimetic soft robotic fish by using the method presented in Chapter 2. The soft robotic fish uses the piezoelectric fiber composite (PFC) as soft actuator. Firstly, the relationships between the input voltage and generated stress of the PFC are derived. The generated stress can be applied on soft structure to investigate the motion performance of the soft robotic fish. To support the driving model of the PFC, the corresponding experiments on simple beam model are carried out. By comparing the simulation results with experimental results, the effectiveness of the driving model is verified. Then, the modal analysis in which the fluid is considered as acoustic fluid is performed. The structural mode frequencies and mode shapes of the soft robotic fish in the fluid are calculated. By comparing these modes’ motion with those of the real fishes, the fish-like propulsion mode is identified to realize the corresponding propulsion motion of the soft robotic fish. Furthermore, based on the verified driving model of soft actuator, the amplitude of the main propulsion motion of soft robotic fish is calculated. Through FSI analysis, the relationships of driving frequencies of input signal with propulsive force and displacement of propulsion motion, and vortex distribution in the wake around the soft robotic fish are investigated for the case of fixing robot head. Besides, the motion control of soft robot is investigated to realize turning motion in the fluid. Through controlling the input voltage amplitude on soft actuators of the robot, turning right and turning left motion are identified in the swimming when the input voltage amplitudes on two actuators are in asymmetric distribution. Chapter 4 is experiment evaluation. In order to validate the results of numerical simulation analysis described in Chapter 3, the mode shapes, amplitude of propulsion motion, propulsive force and vortex distribution around soft robotic fish for the case of fixing robot head, and turning motion are measured by using actual robot prototype. The present simulation results are congruent with experiments. By the results, the effectiveness of the modelling method and numerical analysis used in the research is verified and they are useful to predict the propulsion characteristics of the soft robotic fish in the fluid for performance improvement. Chapter 5 develops a new soft robotic fish with high performance based on above modelling method and numerical analysis by optimization. Firstly, the structural parameters of the robot are allowed to vary within a range and the amplitude of the propulsion motion for the soft robot is calculated for different parameters by the numerical analysis. Then the structural parameters of the robot capable of propulsion motion with largeramplitude are chosen for improvement. Based on this result, new soft robot is designed and evaluated by experiments. From the experimental results of the new soft robot, it is confirmed that the higher swimming speed, better fish-like swimming performance and larger turning velocity are realized. It can be said that the new soft robotic fish has been developed successfully for improvement. Chapter 6 summarizes the conclusions and future works of this research.電気通信大学201

    Numerical simulation of a multi-body system mimicking coupled active and passive movements of fish swimming

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    A multi-body system model is proposed for the mimicking of swimming fish with coupled active and passive movements. The relevant algorithms of the kinematics and dynamics of the multi-body system and coupled fluid solver are developed and fully validated. A simplified three-body model is applied for the investigation of the hydrodynamic performance of both an active pitch motion and passive movement. In general, there is an optimal stiffness, under which the model swims with the fastest velocity. The effect of the damper can be drawn only when the stiffness is small. Comparing with the rigid tail, the flexible tail leads to a faster speed when the stiffness and damping coefficients are in a suitable range

    3D locomotion biomimetic robot fish with haptic feedback

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    This thesis developed a biomimetic robot fish and built a novel haptic robot fish system based on the kinematic modelling and three-dimentional computational fluid dynamic (CFD) hydrodynamic analysis. The most important contribution is the successful CFD simulation of the robot fish, supporting users in understanding the hydrodynamic properties around it

    CFD-FSI Analysis on Motion Control of Bio-inspired Underwater AUV System Utilizing PID Control

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    For a design of a bio-inspired fish like robot with caudal fin a Fluid Structure Interaction (FSI) analysis has been conducted to investigate the influence of material properties and undulation kinematic on the hydrodynamic performance and efficiency. This supports the design process with focus on practical prototype build up

    Developing High Performance Linear Carangiform Swimming

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    This thesis examines the linear swimming motion of Carangiform fish, and investigates how to improve the swimming performance of robotic fish within the fields of kinematic modeling and mechanical engineering, in a successful attempt to replicate the high performance of real fish. Intensive research was conducted in order to study the Carangiform swimming motion, where observational studies of the common carp were undertaken. Firstly, a full-body length Carangiform swimming motion is proposed to coordinate the anterior, mid-body and posterior displacements in an attempt to reduce the large kinematic errors in the existing free swimming robotic fish. It optimizes the forces around the centre of mass and initiates the starting moment of added mass upstream therefore increasing performance, in terms of swimming speed. The introduced pattern is experimentally tested against the traditional approach (of posterior confined body motion). A first generation robotic fish is devised with a novel mechanical drive system operating in the two swimming patterns. It is shown conclusively that by coordinating the full-body length of the Carangiform swimming motion a significant increase in linear swimming speed is gained over the traditional posterior confined wave form and reduces the large kinematic errors seen in existing free swimming robotic fish (Achieving the cruising speeds of real fish). Based on the experimental results of the first generation, a further three robotic fish are developed: (A) iSplash-OPTIMIZE: it becomes clear that further tuning of the kinematic parameters may provide a greater performance increase in the distance travelled per tail beat. (B) iSplash-II: it shows that combining the critical aspects of the mechanical drive system of iSplash-I with higher frequencies and higher productive forces can significantly increase maximum velocity. This prototype is able to outperform real Carangiform fish in terms of average maximum velocity (measured in body lengths/ second) and endurance, the duration that top speed is maintained. (C) iSplash-MICRO: it verifies that the mechanical drive system could be reduced in scale to improve navigational exploration, whilst retaining high-speed swimming performance. A small robotic fish is detailed with an equivalent maximum velocity (BL/s) to real fish

    Biomimetic and Live Medusae Reveal the Mechanistic Advantages of a Flexible Bell Margin

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    Flexible bell margins are characteristic components of rowing medusan morphologies and are expected to contribute towards their high propulsive efficiency. However, the mechanistic basis of thrust augmentation by flexible propulsors remained unresolved, so the impact of bell margin flexibility on medusan swimming has also remained unresolved. We used biomimetic robotic jellyfish vehicles to elucidate that propulsive thrust enhancement by flexible medusan bell margins relies upon fluid dynamic interactions between entrained flows at the inflexion point of the exumbrella and flows expelled from under the bell. Coalescence of flows from these two regions resulted in enhanced fluid circulation and, therefore, thrust augmentation for flexible margins of both medusan vehicles and living medusae. Using particle image velocimetry (PIV) data we estimated pressure fields to demonstrate a mechanistic basis of enhanced flows associated with the flexible bell margin. Performance of vehicles with flexible margins was further enhanced by vortex interactions that occur during bell expansion. Hydrodynamic and performance similarities between robotic vehicles and live animals demonstrated that the propulsive advantages of flexible margins found in nature can be emulated by human-engineered propulsors. Although medusae are simple animal models for description of this process, these results may contribute towards understanding the performance of flexible margins among other animal lineages

    A numerical study of fin and jet propulsions involving fluid-structure interactions

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    Fish swimming is elegant and efficient, which inspires humans to learn from them to design high-performance artificial underwater vehicles. Research on aquatic locomotion has made extensive progress towards a better understanding of how aquatic animals control their flexible body and fin for propulsion. Although the structural flexibility and deformation of the body and fin are believed to be important features to achieve optimal swimming performance, studies on high-fidelity deformable body and fin with complex material behavior, such as non-uniform stiffness distributions, are rare. In this thesis, a fully coupled three-dimensional high-fidelity fluid-structure interaction (FSI) solver is developed to investigate the flow field evolution and propulsion performance of caudal fin and jet propulsion involving body and/or fin deformation. Within this FSI solver, the fluid is resolved by solving unsteady and viscous Navier-Stokes equations based on the finite volume method with a multi-block grid system. The solid dynamics are solved by a nonlinear finite element method. The coupling between the two solvers is achieved in a partitioned approach in which convergence check and sub-iteration are implemented to ensure numerical stability and accuracy. Validations are conducted by comparing the simulation results of classical benchmarks with previous data in the literature, and good agreements between them are obtained. The developed FSI solver is then applied to study the bio-inspired fin and jet propulsion involving body deformation. Specifically, the effect of non-uniform stiffness distributions of fish body and/or fin, key features of fish swimming which have been excluded in most previous studies, on the propulsive performance is first investigated. Simulation results of a sunfish-like caudal fin model and a tuna-inspired swimmer model both show that larger thrust and propulsion efficiency can be achieved by a non-uniform stiffness distribution (e.g., increased by 11.2% and 9.9%, respectively, for the sunfish-like model) compared with a uniform stiffness profile. Despite the improved propulsive e performance, a bionic variable fish body stiffness does not yield fish-like midline kinematics observed in real fish, suggesting that fish movement involves significant active control that cannot be replicated purely by passive deformations. Subsequent studies focus on the jet propulsion inspired by squid locomotion using the developed numerical solver. Simulation results of a two-dimensional inflation-deflation jet propulsion system, whose inflation is actuated by an added external force that mimics the muscle constriction of the mantle and deflation is caused by the release of elastic energy of the structure, suggest larger mean thrust production and higher efficiency in high Reynolds number scenarios compared with the cases in laminar flow. A unique symmetry-breaking instability in turbulent flow is found to stem from irregular internal body vortices, which cause symmetry breaking in the wake. Besides, a three-dimensional squid-like jet propulsion system in the presence of background flow is studied by prescribing the body deformation and jet velocity profiles. The effect of the background flow on the leading vortex ring formation and jet propulsion is investigated, and the thrust sources of the overall pulsed jet are revealed as well. Finally, FSI analysis on motion control of a self-propelled flexible swimmer in front of a cylinder utilizing proportional-derivative (PD) control is conducted. The amplitude of the actuation force, which is applied to the swimmer to bend it to produce thrust, is dynamically tuned by a feedback PD controller to instruct the swimmer to swim the desired distance from an initial position to a target location and then hold the station there. Despite the same swimming distance, a swimmer whose departure location is closer to the cylinder requires less energy consumption to reach the target and hold the position there.Fish swimming is elegant and efficient, which inspires humans to learn from them to design high-performance artificial underwater vehicles. Research on aquatic locomotion has made extensive progress towards a better understanding of how aquatic animals control their flexible body and fin for propulsion. Although the structural flexibility and deformation of the body and fin are believed to be important features to achieve optimal swimming performance, studies on high-fidelity deformable body and fin with complex material behavior, such as non-uniform stiffness distributions, are rare. In this thesis, a fully coupled three-dimensional high-fidelity fluid-structure interaction (FSI) solver is developed to investigate the flow field evolution and propulsion performance of caudal fin and jet propulsion involving body and/or fin deformation. Within this FSI solver, the fluid is resolved by solving unsteady and viscous Navier-Stokes equations based on the finite volume method with a multi-block grid system. The solid dynamics are solved by a nonlinear finite element method. The coupling between the two solvers is achieved in a partitioned approach in which convergence check and sub-iteration are implemented to ensure numerical stability and accuracy. Validations are conducted by comparing the simulation results of classical benchmarks with previous data in the literature, and good agreements between them are obtained. The developed FSI solver is then applied to study the bio-inspired fin and jet propulsion involving body deformation. Specifically, the effect of non-uniform stiffness distributions of fish body and/or fin, key features of fish swimming which have been excluded in most previous studies, on the propulsive performance is first investigated. Simulation results of a sunfish-like caudal fin model and a tuna-inspired swimmer model both show that larger thrust and propulsion efficiency can be achieved by a non-uniform stiffness distribution (e.g., increased by 11.2% and 9.9%, respectively, for the sunfish-like model) compared with a uniform stiffness profile. Despite the improved propulsive e performance, a bionic variable fish body stiffness does not yield fish-like midline kinematics observed in real fish, suggesting that fish movement involves significant active control that cannot be replicated purely by passive deformations. Subsequent studies focus on the jet propulsion inspired by squid locomotion using the developed numerical solver. Simulation results of a two-dimensional inflation-deflation jet propulsion system, whose inflation is actuated by an added external force that mimics the muscle constriction of the mantle and deflation is caused by the release of elastic energy of the structure, suggest larger mean thrust production and higher efficiency in high Reynolds number scenarios compared with the cases in laminar flow. A unique symmetry-breaking instability in turbulent flow is found to stem from irregular internal body vortices, which cause symmetry breaking in the wake. Besides, a three-dimensional squid-like jet propulsion system in the presence of background flow is studied by prescribing the body deformation and jet velocity profiles. The effect of the background flow on the leading vortex ring formation and jet propulsion is investigated, and the thrust sources of the overall pulsed jet are revealed as well. Finally, FSI analysis on motion control of a self-propelled flexible swimmer in front of a cylinder utilizing proportional-derivative (PD) control is conducted. The amplitude of the actuation force, which is applied to the swimmer to bend it to produce thrust, is dynamically tuned by a feedback PD controller to instruct the swimmer to swim the desired distance from an initial position to a target location and then hold the station there. Despite the same swimming distance, a swimmer whose departure location is closer to the cylinder requires less energy consumption to reach the target and hold the position there
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