<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:dcq="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"><records count="1" morepages="false" start="1" end="1"><record rownumber="1"><dc:product_type>Dissertation</dc:product_type><dc:title>Springs and Wings: A robotic study of the insect flight system</dc:title><dc:creator>Lynch, James</dc:creator><dc:corporate_author/><dc:editor/><dc:description>In the last decade, roboticists have had significant success building centimeter-scale
flapping wing micro aerial vehicles (FWMAVs) inspired by the flight of insects. Evidence
suggests that insects store and release energy in the thoracic exoskeleton to improve energy
efficiency by flapping at resonance. Insect-inspired micro flying robots have also leveraged
resonance to improve efficiency, but they have discovered that operating at the resonant frequency
leads to issues with flight control. This research seeks to investigate the roles that elasticity,
aerodynamics, and muscle dynamics play in the emergent dynamics of flapping flight by studying
elastic flapping spring-wing systems using dynamically-scaled robophysical models of springwings.
Studying the dynamics of a robot with comparable features enables the validation of models from biology that are otherwise difficult to test in living insects, the generation of new
hypotheses, and the development of novel FWMAV designs.
In Chapter 1, the spring-wing system is characterized via a nonlinear spring-mass-damper
model. A robophysical model validates that such systems gain energetic benefits from operating
at resonance, but reveals that the benefit scales with an underappreciated dimensionless ratio of
inertial to aerodynamic forces, the Weis-Fogh number. We show through dimensional analysis
that any real system, living or robotic, must balance the mechanical advantage gained from
operating at resonance with diminishing returns in efficiency. Chapter 2 further explores the
impact of the Weis-Fogh number on flapping dynamics, showing that responsiveness to control
inputs is reduced and resistance to environmental perturbations is increased as the dimensionless
ratio increases. Together with calculations of Weis-Fogh number in insects, these studies
illustrate tradeoffs that drive evolution of resonant flight in nature and guide development of
future FWMAVs with elastic energy exchange.
In the second half of the thesis, muscle dynamics are introduced in the form of a simplified
model of self-excited asynchronous insect muscle. In Chapter 3, a form of velocity feedback,
adapted from experiments on insect flight muscle, is developed and integrated with the springwing
model, producing a system that generates steady flapping via limit-cycle oscillations
despite the absence of periodic control inputs. The model is explored analytically, in simulation,
and via implementation on the robotic spring-wing. Novel dynamic characteristics that enable
adaptation to damage and passive response to wing collisions are described. Chapter 4 leverages
the asynchronous feedback model as part of an interdisciplinary study of the evolution of
asynchronous muscle. Phylogenetic analysis, direct measurement of insect muscle dynamics, and
experiments on the robophysical system show that evolutionary transitions between periodicallyforced
and self-excited insect muscle were likely made possible by a ”bridge” in the dynamic
parameter space that could be traversed under specific conditions. The asynchronous spring-wing
model provides new insight into the flight and evolution of some of the most agile insects in
nature, and presents a novel adaptive control scheme for future FWMAVs.</dc:description><dc:publisher>escholarship.org</dc:publisher><dc:date>2023-07-03</dc:date><dc:nsf_par_id>10634387</dc:nsf_par_id><dc:journal_name/><dc:journal_volume/><dc:journal_issue/><dc:page_range_or_elocation/><dc:issn/><dc:isbn/><dc:doi>https://doi.org/</dc:doi><dcq:identifierAwardId>2100858</dcq:identifierAwardId><dc:subject/><dc:version_number/><dc:location/><dc:rights/><dc:institution>University of California, San Diego</dc:institution><dc:sponsoring_org>National Science Foundation</dc:sponsoring_org></record></records></rdf:RDF>