A fluid-driven soft robotic fish inspired by fish muscle architecture.

Journal: Bioinspiration & biomimetics
Published Date:

Abstract

Artificial fish-like robots developed to date often focus on the external morphology of fish and have rarely addressed the contribution of the structure and morphology of biological muscle. However, biological studies have proven that fish utilize the contraction of muscle fibers to drive the protective flexible connective tissue to swim. This paper introduces a pneumatic silicone structure prototype inspired by the red muscle system of fish and applies it to the fish-like robot named Flexi-Tuna. The key innovation is to make the fluid-driven units simulate the red muscle fiber bundles of fish and embed them into a flexible tuna-like matrix. The driving units act as muscle fibers to generate active contraction force, and the flexible matrix as connective tissue to generate passive deformation. Applying alternant pressure to the driving units can produce a bending moment, causing the tail to swing. As a result, the structural design of Flexi-Tuna has excellent bearing capacity compared with the traditional cavity-type and keeps the body smooth. On this basis, a general method is proposed for modeling the fish-like robot based on the independent analysis of the active and passive body, providing a foundation for Flexi-Tuna's size design. Followed by the robot's static and underwater dynamic tests, we used finite element static analysis and fluid numerical simulation to compare the results. The experimental results showed that the maximum swing angle of the tuna-like robot reached 20°, and the maximum thrust reached 0.185 N at the optimum frequency of 3.5 Hz. In this study, we designed a unique system that matches the functional level of biological muscles. As a result, we realized the application of fluid-driven artificial muscle to bionic fish and expanded new ideas for the structural design of flexible bionic fish.

Authors

  • Sijia Liu
    These authors contributed equally to this study and Dr. Li is now working at IBM; Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA; Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.
  • Yingjie Wang
    Cardiovascular Department, Shuguang Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai University of TCM Shanghai, China.
  • Zhennan Li
    School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Jilin University, Changchun 130022, People's Republic of China.
  • Miao Jin
    School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Jilin University, Changchun 130022, People's Republic of China.
  • Lei Ren
    Department of Biomaterials, College of Materials, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, P.R. China.
  • Chunbao Liu
    School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Jilin University, Changchun 130022, People's Republic of China.