• DocumentCode
    1050893
  • Title

    The Development of a Biologically Inspired Propulsor for Unmanned Underwater Vehicles

  • Author

    Tangorra, James Louis ; Davidson, S. Naomi ; Hunter, I.W. ; Madden, Peter G A ; Lauder, George V. ; Dong, Haibo ; Bozkurttas, Meliha ; Mittal, Rajat

  • Author_Institution
    Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge
  • Volume
    32
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    7/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    533
  • Lastpage
    550
  • Abstract
    Fish are remarkable in their ability to maneuver and to control their body position. This ability is the result of the coordinated movement of fins which extend from the body and form control surfaces that can create and vector forces in 3-D. We have embarked on a research program designed to develop a maneuvering propulsor for unmanned undersea vehicles (UUVs) that is based on the pectoral fin of the bluegill sunfish. For this, the anatomy, kinematics, and hydrodynamics of the sunfish pectoral fin were investigated experimentally and through the use of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations. These studies identified that the kinematics of the sunfish pectoral fin are very complex and are not easily described by traditional ldquorowingrdquo- and ldquoflappingrdquo-type kinematics. A consequence of the complex motion is that the pectoral fin can produce forward thrust during both its outstroke (abduction) and instroke (adduction), and while doing so generates only small lateral and lift forces. The results of the biological studies were used to guide the design of robotic pectoral fins which were built as experimental devices and used to investigate the mechanisms of thrust production and control. Because of a design that was based heavily on the anatomy of the sunfish fin, the robotic pectoral fins had the level of control and degrees of freedom necessary to reproduce many of the complex fin motions used by the sunfish during steady swimming. These robotic fins are excellent experimental tools, and are an important first step towards developing propulsive devices that will give the next generation of UUVs the ability to produce and control thrust like highly maneuverable fish.
  • Keywords
    biomimetics; computational fluid dynamics; mobile robots; remotely operated vehicles; robot kinematics; underwater vehicles; biologically inspired propulsor; bluegill sunfish; body position control; computational fluid dynamics simulations; coordinated movement; maneuverable fish; maneuvering propulsor; robotic pectoral fins; thrust production; unmanned underwater vehicles; vector forces; Anatomy; Biological control systems; Computational fluid dynamics; Computational modeling; Force control; Hydrodynamics; Marine animals; Production; Robot kinematics; Underwater vehicles; Autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV); biorobotic; design; drag; pectoral fin; robotic; thrust; unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV);
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0364-9059
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JOE.2007.903362
  • Filename
    4443174