TY - JOUR
T1 - A Novel Actuation Strategy for an Agile Bioinspired FWAV Performing a Morphing-Coupled Wingbeat Pattern
AU - Chen, Ang
AU - Song, Bifeng
AU - Wang, Zhihe
AU - Xue, Dong
AU - Liu, Kang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2004-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2023/2/1
Y1 - 2023/2/1
N2 - Flying vertebrates exhibit sophisticated wingbeat kinematics. Their specialized forelimbs allow for the wing morphing motion to couple with the flapping motion during their level flight. Previous flyable bionic platforms have successfully applied bioinspired wing morphing but cannot yet be propelled by the morphing-coupled wingbeat pattern. Spurred by this, we develop a bioinspired flapping-wing aerial vehicle entitled RoboFalcon, which is equipped with a novel mechanism to drive the bat-style morphing wings, performs a morphing-coupled wingbeat pattern, and overall manages an appealing flight. The novel mechanism of RoboFalcon allows coupling the morphing and flapping during level flight and decoupling these when maneuvering is required, producing a bilateral asymmetric downstroke affording high rolling agility. The bat-style morphing wing is designed with a tilted mounting angle around the radius at the wrist joint to mimic the wrist supination and pronation effect of flying vertebrates' forelimbs. Wind tunnel tests indicate that the rolling moment of the asymmetric downstroke is correlated with the flapping frequency, and the wrist mounting angle can be used for tuning the angle of attack, lift-thrust configuration, and power consumption of the equilibrium flight state. The agility of RoboFalcon is assessed through several tethered rolling maneuvers and outdoor free flight tests, and we present a concise analysis of the vehicle's lateral dynamics model based on system identification. We believe that this article yields a well-performing bionic platform and provides a new actuation strategy for the morphing-coupled flapping flight.
AB - Flying vertebrates exhibit sophisticated wingbeat kinematics. Their specialized forelimbs allow for the wing morphing motion to couple with the flapping motion during their level flight. Previous flyable bionic platforms have successfully applied bioinspired wing morphing but cannot yet be propelled by the morphing-coupled wingbeat pattern. Spurred by this, we develop a bioinspired flapping-wing aerial vehicle entitled RoboFalcon, which is equipped with a novel mechanism to drive the bat-style morphing wings, performs a morphing-coupled wingbeat pattern, and overall manages an appealing flight. The novel mechanism of RoboFalcon allows coupling the morphing and flapping during level flight and decoupling these when maneuvering is required, producing a bilateral asymmetric downstroke affording high rolling agility. The bat-style morphing wing is designed with a tilted mounting angle around the radius at the wrist joint to mimic the wrist supination and pronation effect of flying vertebrates' forelimbs. Wind tunnel tests indicate that the rolling moment of the asymmetric downstroke is correlated with the flapping frequency, and the wrist mounting angle can be used for tuning the angle of attack, lift-thrust configuration, and power consumption of the equilibrium flight state. The agility of RoboFalcon is assessed through several tethered rolling maneuvers and outdoor free flight tests, and we present a concise analysis of the vehicle's lateral dynamics model based on system identification. We believe that this article yields a well-performing bionic platform and provides a new actuation strategy for the morphing-coupled flapping flight.
KW - Biologically-inspired robots
KW - biomimetics
KW - flapping wing aerial vehicle
KW - mechanism design
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85135745944&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TRO.2022.3189812
DO - 10.1109/TRO.2022.3189812
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85135745944
SN - 1552-3098
VL - 39
SP - 452
EP - 469
JO - IEEE Transactions on Robotics
JF - IEEE Transactions on Robotics
IS - 1
ER -