4.5 Article

How wing kinematics affect power requirements and aerodynamic force production in a robotic bat wing

Journal

BIOINSPIRATION & BIOMIMETICS
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1748-3182/9/2/025008

Keywords

bat; robot; flight kinematics; mechanical power; aerodynamic force

Funding

  1. AFOSR MURI [F49620-01-1-0335, FA9550-12-1-0210]
  2. NSF [IOS 0723392]
  3. Bushnell Graduate Research and Education Fund
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

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Bats display a wide variety of behaviors that require different amounts of aerodynamic force. To control and modulate aerodynamic force, bats change wing kinematics, which, in turn, may change the power required for wing motion. There are many kinematic mechanisms that bats, and other flapping animals, can use to increase aerodynamic force, e. g. increasing wingbeat frequency or amplitude. However, we do not know if there is a difference in energetic cost between these different kinematic mechanisms. To assess the relationship between mechanical power input and aerodynamic force output across different isolated kinematic parameters, we programmed a robotic bat wing to flap over a range of kinematic parameters and measured aerodynamic force and mechanical power. We systematically varied five kinematic parameters: wingbeat frequency, wingbeat amplitude, stroke plane angle, downstroke ratio, and wing folding. Kinematic values were based on observed values from free flying Cynopterus brachyotis, the species on which the robot was based. We describe how lift, thrust, and power change with increases in each kinematic variable. We compare the power costs associated with generating additional force through the four kinematic mechanisms controlled at the shoulder, and show that all four mechanisms require approximately the same power to generate a given force. This result suggests that no single parameter offers an energetic advantage over the others. Finally, we show that retracting the wing during upstroke reduces power requirements for flapping and increases net lift production, but decreases net thrust production. These results compare well with studies performed on C. brachyotis, offering insight into natural flight kinematics.

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