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Journal ArticleDOI

Consecutive aquatic jump-gliding with water-reactive fuel

TLDR
This paper investigates the use of solid reactants as a combustion gas source for consecutive aquatic jump-gliding sequences and presents an untethered robot that is capable of multiple launches from the water surface and of transitioning from jetting to a glide.
Abstract
Robotic vehicles that are capable of autonomously transitioning between various terrains and fluids have received notable attention in the past decade due to their potential to navigate previously unexplored and/or unpredictable environments. Specifically, aerial-aquatic mobility will enable robots to operate in cluttered aquatic environments and carry out a variety of sensing tasks. One of the principal challenges in the development of such vehicles is that the transition from water to flight is a power-intensive process. At a small scale, this is made more difficult by the limitations of electromechanical actuation and the unfavorable scaling of the physics involved. This paper investigates the use of solid reactants as a combustion gas source for consecutive aquatic jump-gliding sequences. We present an untethered robot that is capable of multiple launches from the water surface and of transitioning from jetting to a glide. The power required for aquatic jump-gliding is obtained by reacting calcium carbide powder with the available environmental water to produce combustible acetylene gas, allowing the robot to rapidly reach flight speed from water. The 160-gram robot could achieve a flight distance of 26 meters using 0.2 gram of calcium carbide. Here, the combustion process, jetting phase, and glide were modeled numerically and compared with experimental results. Combustion pressure and inertial measurements were collected on board during flight, and the vehicle trajectory and speed were analyzed using external tracking data. The proposed propulsion approach offers a promising solution for future high-power density aerial-aquatic propulsion in robotics.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Ladybird beetle–inspired compliant origami

TL;DR: In this paper, the deformation and geometry of the compliant facet enables both energy storage and self-locking in a single origami joint, and a deployable glider module is developed for a multimodal robot.
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Jumping Locomotion Strategies: From Animals to Bioinspired Robots

TL;DR: The state of the art of jumping robots has been systematically analyzed, based on their biological model, including invertebrates and vertebrates as well as aquatic animals, and the developmental trends of bioinspired jumping robots are predicted.
Journal ArticleDOI

MEDUSA: A Multi-Environment Dual-Robot for Underwater Sample Acquisition

TL;DR: The proposed solution encompasses a multirotor capable of landing and floating on the water, and a tethered mobile underwater pod that can be deployed to depths of several meters, and considerably simplifies robotic underwater monitoring.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review of hybrid aerial underwater vehicle: Cross-domain mobility and transitions control

TL;DR: In this paper , a detailed literature review of existing hybrid aerial vehicles characterizing their designs, and describes the current state of the art in methodologies to enable cross-domain mobility of HAUVs is presented.
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Aerial-aquatic robots capable of crossing the air-water boundary and hitchhiking on surfaces

TL;DR: In this paper , an aerial-aquatic hitchhiking robot that is self-contained for flying, swimming, and attaching to surfaces in both air and water and that can seamlessly move between the two.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Small-scale soft-bodied robot with multimodal locomotion

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrate magneto-elastic soft millimetre-scale robots that can swim inside and on the surface of liquids, climb liquid menisci, roll and walk on solid surfaces, jump over obstacles, and crawl within narrow tunnels.
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Science, technology and the future of small autonomous drones

TL;DR: This work identifies scientific and technological advances that are expected to translate, within appropriate regulatory frameworks, into pervasive use of autonomous drones for civilian applications.
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A 3D-printed, functionally graded soft robot powered by combustion

TL;DR: Using three-dimensional printing to fuse together multiple materials to manufacture a combustion-powered robot whose body transitions from a rigid core to a soft exterior, which is able to perform untethered jumping and also enhances performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

AmphiBot I: an amphibious snake-like robot

TL;DR: A biologically inspired amphibious snake-like robot designed to be capable of anguilliform swimming like sea-snakes and lampreys in water and lateral undulatory locomotion like a snake on ground is constructed.
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Jumping on water: Surface tension–dominated jumping of water striders and robotic insects

TL;DR: The results suggest an understanding of the hydrodynamic phenomena used by semi-aquatic arthropods during water jumping and prescribe a method for reproducing these capabilities in artificial systems.
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