Graduate Aerospace Laboratories, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States of America.
Mechanical and Civil Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States of America.
Bioinspir Biomim. 2024 Feb 28;19(2). doi: 10.1088/1748-3190/ad277f.
The vast majority of the ocean's volume remains unexplored, in part because of limitations on the vertical range and measurement duration of existing robotic platforms. In light of the accelerating rate of climate change impacts on the physics and biogeochemistry of the ocean, the need for new tools that can measure more of the ocean on faster timescales is becoming pressing. Robotic platforms inspired or enabled by aquatic organisms have the potential to augment conventional technologies for ocean exploration. Recent work demonstrated the feasibility of directly stimulating the muscle tissue of live jellyfish via implanted microelectronics. We present a biohybrid robotic jellyfish that leverages this external electrical swimming control, while also using a 3D printed passive mechanical attachment to streamline the jellyfish shape, increase swimming performance, and significantly enhance payload capacity. A six-meter-tall, 13 600 l saltwater facility was constructed to enable testing of the vertical swimming capabilities of the biohybrid robotic jellyfish over distances exceeding 35 body diameters. We found that the combination of external swimming control and the addition of the mechanical forebody resulted in an increase in swimming speeds to 4.5 times natural jellyfish locomotion. Moreover, the biohybrid jellyfish were capable of carrying a payload volume up to 105% of the jellyfish body volume. The added payload decreased the intracycle acceleration of the biohybrid robots relative to natural jellyfish, which could also facilitate more precise measurements by onboard sensors that depend on consistent platform motion. While many robotic exploration tools are limited by cost, energy expenditure, and varying oceanic environmental conditions, this platform is inexpensive, highly efficient, and benefits from the widespread natural habitats of jellyfish. The demonstrated performance of these biohybrid robots suggests an opportunity to expand the set of robotic tools for comprehensive monitoring of the changing ocean.
海洋的绝大部分体积仍未被探索,部分原因是现有的机器人平台在垂直范围和测量持续时间上存在限制。鉴于气候变化对海洋物理和生物地球化学的影响速度正在加快,人们迫切需要新的工具来更快地测量更多的海洋。受水生生物启发或支持的机器人平台有可能增强海洋探索的传统技术。最近的工作证明了通过植入微电子设备直接刺激活水母肌肉组织的可行性。我们提出了一种生物混合机器人水母,它利用这种外部电驱动游泳控制,同时还使用 3D 打印的被动机械附件来流线型水母形状,提高游泳性能,并显著增强有效载荷能力。建造了一个六米高、13600 升的盐水设施,以测试生物混合机器人水母在超过 35 个体长的距离内的垂直游泳能力。我们发现,外部游泳控制的组合和机械前体的增加导致游泳速度提高到自然水母游动速度的 4.5 倍。此外,生物混合水母能够携带有效载荷体积达到水母身体体积的 105%。增加的有效载荷降低了生物混合机器人相对于自然水母的循环内加速度,这也可以通过依赖于一致平台运动的机载传感器进行更精确的测量。虽然许多机器人探索工具受到成本、能源消耗和变化的海洋环境条件的限制,但这个平台成本低廉、效率高,并且受益于水母广泛的自然栖息地。这些生物混合机器人的演示性能表明有机会扩展用于全面监测不断变化的海洋的机器人工具集。