The effectiveness of resistive force theory in granular locomotion
Author(s) -
Tingnan Zhang,
Daniel I. Goldman
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
physics of fluids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.188
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 1089-7666
pISSN - 1070-6631
DOI - 10.1063/1.4898629
Subject(s) - physics , drag , inclined plane , granular material , kinematics , mechanics , resistive touchscreen , classical mechanics , thrust , plane (geometry) , horizontal plane , fictitious force , movement (music) , inertial frame of reference , geometry , computer science , mathematics , quantum mechanics , computer vision , thermodynamics , acoustics
© 2014 AIP Publishing LLCThis paper was presented as an invited talk at the 66th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics, 24–26
November 2013, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.DOI: 10.1063/1.4898629Resistive force theory (RFT) is often used to analyze the movement of microscopic
organisms swimming in fluids. In RFT, a body is partitioned into infinitesimal segments, each of which generates thrust and experiences drag. Linear superposition of forces from elements over the body allows prediction of swimming velocities and efficiencies. We show that RFT quantitatively describes the movement of animals and robots that move on and within dry granular media (GM), collections of particles that display solid, fluid, and gas-like features. RFT works well when the GM is slightly
polydisperse, and in the “frictional fluid” regime such that frictional forces dominate
material inertial forces, and when locomotion can be approximated as confined to a
plane. Within a given plane (horizontal or vertical) relationships that govern the force
versus orientation of an elemental intruder are functionally independent of the granular medium. We use the RFT to explain features of locomotion on and within granular
media including kinematic and muscle activation patterns during sand-swimming by
a sandfish lizard and a shovel-nosed snake, optimal movement patterns of a Purcell 3-link sand-swimming robot revealed by a geometric mechanics approach, and legged locomotion of small robots on the surface of GM. We close by discussing
situations to which granular RFT has not yet been applied (such as inclined granular
surfaces), and the advances in the physics of granular media needed to apply RFT in
such situations
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