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Ultrafast elastocapillary fans control agile maneuvering in ripple bugs and robots

Víctor M. Ortega-Jiménez, Dong-Jin Kim, Sunny Kumar, Changhwan Kim, Je‐Sung Koh, M. Saad Bhamla

Year
2025
Citations
11

Abstract

ripple bugs use specialized middle-leg fans with a flat-ribbon architecture to navigate the surfaces of fast-moving streams. We show that the fan's directional stiffness enables fast, passive elastocapillary morphing, independent of muscle input. This flat-ribbon fan balances collapsibility during leg recovery with rigidity during drag-based propulsion, enabling full-body 96° turns in 50 milliseconds, with forward speeds of up to 120 body lengths per second-on par with fruit fly saccades in air. Drawing from this morphofunctional architecture, we engineered a 1-milligram elastocapillary fan integrated into an insect-scale robot. Experiments with both insects and robots confirmed that self-morphing fans improve thrust, braking, and maneuverability. Our findings link fan microstructure to controlled interfacial propulsion and establish design principles for compact, elastocapillary actuators in agile aquatic microrobots.

Keywords

RobotMorphingActuatorPropulsionAgile software developmentRibbonDragRippleLift (data mining)Computer science

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