跳跃的
不稳定性
机器人
刚度
跳跃
曲率
控制理论(社会学)
材料科学
计算机科学
机械
模拟
纳米技术
物理
数学
复合材料
几何学
地质学
人工智能
控制(管理)
古生物学
量子力学
作者
Sunny Kumar,Ishant Tiwari,Víctor Manuel Ortega-Jiménez,Adler R. Dillman,Dongjing He,Yuhang Hu,M. Saad Bhamla
标识
DOI:10.1101/2024.06.07.598012
摘要
Entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs) exhibit a bending-elastic instability, or kink, before becoming airborne, a feature hypothesized but not proven to enhance jumping performance. Here, we provide the evidence that this kink is crucial for improving launch performance. We demonstrate that EPNs actively modulate their aspect ratio, forming a liquid-latched closed loop over a slow timescale O (1 s), then rapidly open it O (10 µs), achieving heights of 20 body lengths (BL) and generating ∼ 10 4 W/Kg of power. Using jumping nematodes, a bio-inspired Soft Jumping Model (SoftJM), and computational simulations, we explore the mechanisms and implications of this kink. EPNs control their takeoff direction by adjusting their head position and center of mass, a mechanism verified through phase maps of jump directions in simulations and SoftJM experiments. Our findings reveal that the reversible kink instability at the point of highest curvature on the ventral side enhances energy storage using the nematode’s limited muscular force. We investigated the impact of aspect ratio on kink instability and jumping performance using SoftJM, and quantified EPN cuticle stiffness with AFM, comparing it with C. elegans . This led to a stiffness-modified SoftJM design with a carbon fiber backbone, achieving jumps of ∼25 BL. Our study reveals how harnessing kink instabilities, a typical failure mode, enables bidirectional jumps in soft robots on complex substrates like sand, offering a novel approach for designing limbless robots for controlled jumping, locomotion, and even planetary exploration.
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