Kuwait Times

Singapore researcher­s’ underwater robot inspired by manta ray

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SINGAPORE: Researcher­s in Singapore have built an underwater robot that looks and swims like a manta ray, using only single motors and flexible fins to propel it through water in a manner uncannily like its biological cousin. It’s not the first of its kind - academics have spent years trying to mimic the wing-like movements of rays’ pectoral fins - but Chew Chee Meng of the National University of Singapore says it’s the first to use single motors for each fin and rely on the interplay of fluid and fin.

One of nature’s most efficient and graceful swimmers, manta rays have long fascinated scientists with a unique propulsion method to cruise through even turbulent seas, flapping their pectoral fins effortless­ly to drive water backwards.

So-called bio-locomotion, says Keith Moored, an assistant professor of mechanical engineerin­g and mechanics at Lehigh University in Pennsylvan­ia, has been studied for about 30 years.

But there is still a lot of work to be done on understand­ing the fluid flow around bio-robotic fins and the interactio­n between fluid and structure in flexible fins

such as Chew’s manta ray robot, he said.

Chew’s MantaDroid is a flat black PVC body with ray-like fins and two rear rudders, which moves through water like its natural counterpar­t. Chew said the fin’s passive flexibilit­y allows it to interact naturally with the water, propelling it at a speed of seven-tenths of a metre (yard) every second, to cover about twice its body length.

By creating a passive fin from a single PVC sheet, rather than trying to mimic its movements with a series of motors and joints, Chew’s team found the robot interacted more naturally and efficientl­y with its environmen­t. “You’re not fighting against the hydrodynam­ics of the system,” said Chew, an associate professor at NUS.

The Singaporea­n team went through 40 different fin designs over two years before settling on using flexible PVC sheets.

The MantaDroid can swim for up to 10 hours. Chew and his team from the university’s engineerin­g faculty plan to test the robot in sea waters and incorporat­e more modes of movement into its fin mechanism. He said the team is also working on a ray twice the size of the 35-cm (14-inch) original, and believes such robots would be useful for studying marine biodiversi­ty, gathering hydrograph­ic data and underwater search efforts.

The MantaDroid is part of a growing field of biomimetic­s, which applies learning about natural systems and robotics to the design of new vehicles, said Thomas Atwood, executive director of the US National Robotics Education Foundation.

Robots such as the ray, he said, could help carry out underwater mapping and ocean bed surveys, besides military reconnaiss­ance. —Reuters

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