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Going around the bend to understand the role of leg coalescence in metachronal swimming

Nils B. Tack, Sara Oliveira Santos, Monica M. Wilhelmus

发表年份
2025
引用次数
3
访问权限
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摘要

Many of the most abundant aquatic invertebrates display metachronal swimming by sequentially beating closely spaced flexible appendages. Common biophysical mechanisms like appendage spatial asymmetry and phase drive the success and performance of this locomotor mode, which is generally explained by the need to maximize thrust production. However, the potential role of these mechanisms in drag reduction, another important contributor to overall swimming performance, has yet to be evaluated. We present several morphological, functional and physical mechanisms promoting drag reduction during metachronal swimming by exploring appendage differential bending and leg grouping (coalescence). We performed micro-computed tomography (μCT) and in vivo velocimetry measurements of shrimp (Palaemon vulgaris) to design a five-legged robotic metachronal analog. This test platform enabled simultaneous flow and force measurements to quantify the thrust and drag forces produced by flexible and stiff pleopods (legs) beating independently or coalescing. We tested the hypothesis that coalescence and bending effectively reduce drag during the recovery stroke (RS). The curved cross-section of the pleopods enables passive asymmetrical bending during the RS to reduce their drag coefficient by up to 75.8% relative to stiff pleopods. Bending promotes physical interactions, facilitating the coalescence of three pleopods at any time during the RS to reduce drag such that the mean net thrust produced during coalescence is increased by 30.2%. These improvements are explained by the production of a weaker wake compared with stiff and non-coalescing pleopods. Our results describe fundamental biological and physical components of metachronal propulsion that may aid the development of novel bio-inspired underwater vehicles.

关键词

DragThrustAppendageCoalescence (physics)WakeMechanicsPropulsionUnderwaterPhysicsAnatomy

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