Optimal swimming with body compliance in an overdamped medium
By: Jianfeng Lin , Tianyu Wang , Baxi Chong and more
Potential Business Impact:
Helps robots swim better by bending and wiggling.
Elongate animals and robots use undulatory body waves to locomote through diverse environments. Geometric mechanics provides a framework to model and optimize such systems in highly damped environments, connecting a prescribed shape change pattern (gait) with locomotion displacement. However, existing approaches assume precise execution of prescribed gaits, whereas in practice environmental interactions with compliant bodies of animals or robots frequently perturb the realized trajectories. In this work, we extend geometric mechanics to predict locomotor performance and search for optimal swimming strategy of compliant undulators. We introduce a compliant extension of Purcell's three-link swimmer by incorporating series-connected springs at the joints. Body dynamics are derived with resistive force theory. Geometric mechanics is incorporated into movement prediction and into an optimization framework that identifies strategies for controlling compliant swimmers to achieve maximal displacement. We validate our framework on a physical cable-driven three-link limbless robot, and demonstrate accurate prediction and optimization of locomotor performance under varied programmed, state-dependent compliance in a granular medium. Our results establish a systematic physics-based approach for modeling and controlling compliant swimming locomotion, highlighting compliance as a design feature that can be exploited for robust movement in homogeneous and heterogeneous environments.
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