4.6 Article

Serpentine locomotion through elastic energy release

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 14, Issue 130, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2017.0055

Keywords

elastica; configurational force; motility

Funding

  1. ERC AdG Ideas INSTABILITIES [340561]
  2. European Research Council PoC 'Silkene' [693670]
  3. European Commission under the Graphene Flagship Core 1 [696656, WP14]
  4. European Commission under the Fet Proactive 'Neurofibres' [732344]
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [696656, 340561] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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A model for serpentine locomotion is derived from a novel perspective based on concepts from configurational mechanics. The motion is realized through the release of the elastic energy of a deformable rod, sliding inside a frictionless channel, which represents a snake moving against lateral restraints. A new formulation is presented, correcting previous results and including situations never analysed so far, as in the cases when the serpent's body lies only partially inside the restraining channel or when the body has a muscle relaxation localized in a small zone. Micromechanical considerations show that propulsion is the result of reactions tangential to the frictionless constraint and acting on the snake's body, a counter-intuitive feature in mechanics. It is also experimentally demonstrated that the propulsive force driving serpentine motion can be directly measured on a designed apparatus in which flexible bars sweep a frictionless channel. Experiments fully confirm the theoretical modelling, so that the presented results open the way to exploration of effects, such as variability in the bending stiffness or channel geometry or friction, on the propulsive force of snake models made up of elastic rods.

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