Home /Research /A jellyfish-inspired jet propulsion robot actuated by an iris mechanism
LOCOMOTION

A jellyfish-inspired jet propulsion robot actuated by an iris mechanism

Kenneth Marut, Colin Stewart, Tyler Michael, Alex Villanueva, Shashank Priya

Year
2013
Citations
58

Abstract

A jellyfish-inspired jet propulsion robot (JetPRo) is designed, fabricated, and characterized with the objective of creating a fast-swimming uncrewed undersea vehicle. JetPRo measures 7.9?cm in height, 5.7?cm in diameter and is designed to mimic the proficient jetting propulsion mechanism used by the hydromedusa?Sarsia?tubulosa, which measures approximately 1?cm in diameter. In order to achieve the uniform-bell contraction used by S.?tubulosa, we develop a novel circumferential actuation technique based on a mechanical iris diaphragm. When triggered, this mechanism induces a volumetric change of a deformable silicone cavity to expel a jet of fluid and produces positive thrust. A theoretical jetting model is used to optimize JetPRo?s gait for maximum steady-state swimming velocity, a result achieved by minimizing the timing between the contraction and relaxation phases. We validate this finding empirically and quantify the swimming performance of the robot using video tracking and time resolved digital particle image velocimetry. JetPRo was able to produce discrete vortex rings shed before pinch off and swim upwards with a maximum steady-state velocity of 11.6?cm?s?1, outperforming current state-of-the-art robotic jellyfish in velocity as well as diameter-normalized velocity.

Keywords

JellyfishMechanism (biology)Jet propulsionIRIS (biosensor)PropulsionMarine engineeringAerospace engineeringJet (fluid)EngineeringComputer science

Related papers

Browse all LOCOMOTION papers