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  4. Robotic Avian Wing Explains Aerodynamic Advantages of Wing Folding and Stroke Tilting in Flapping Flight
 
research article

Robotic Avian Wing Explains Aerodynamic Advantages of Wing Folding and Stroke Tilting in Flapping Flight

Ajanic, Enrico  
•
Paolini, Adrien  
•
Coster, Charles
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December 23, 2022
Advanced Intelligent Systems

Avian flapping strategies have the potential to revolutionize future drones as they may considerably improve agility, increase slow speed flight capability, and extend the aerodynamic performance. The study of live birds is time-consuming, laborious, and, more importantly, limited to the flapping motion adopted by the animal. The latter makes systematic studies of alternative flapping strategies impossible, limiting our ability to test why birds select specific kinematics among infinite alternatives. Herein, a biohybrid robotic wing is described, partly built from real feathers, with more advanced kinematic capabilities than previous robotic wings and similar to those of a real bird. In a first case study, the robotic wing is used to systematically study the aerodynamic consequences of different upstroke kinematic strategies at different flight speeds and stroke plane angles. The results indicate that wing folding during upstroke not only favors thrust production, as expected, but also reduces force-specific aerodynamic power, indicating a strong selection pressure on protobirds to evolve upstroke wing folding. It is also shown that thrust requirements likely dictate the wing's stroke tilting. Overall, the proposed biohybrid robotic flapper can be used to answer many open questions about avian flapping flights that are impossible to address by observing free-flying birds.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/aisy.202200148
Web of Science ID

WOS:000903658000001

Author(s)
Ajanic, Enrico  
Paolini, Adrien  
Coster, Charles
Floreano, Dario  
Johansson, Christoffer
Date Issued

2022-12-23

Published in
Advanced Intelligent Systems
Subjects

Automation & Control Systems

•

Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence

•

Robotics

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Automation & Control Systems

•

Computer Science

•

Robotics

•

avian biomimetics

•

biohybrid robotic bird wing

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flapping flight aerodynamics

•

leading-edge vortices

•

vortex wake

•

bat

•

kinematics

•

jackdaw

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mechanism

•

tailless

•

design

•

scale

•

drag

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LIS  
Available on Infoscience
January 16, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/193776
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