Portwings

Decoding the Nature of Flapping Flight by port-Hamiltonian System Theory

Flapping flight is one of the wonders of nature and has been vastly studied by biologists and fluid dynamicists. Many artifacts that mimic biological systems have been built at different scales.
For example, we have managed to create a system that resembles the steady flapping behaviour of its biological counterpart and can fly untethered, stably up to 80 km/h in up to 5 Beaufort wind speed. This is the Robird developed at the University of Twente, which got the 2016 ERF Tech Transfer Award, and is commercially exploited by Clear Flight Solutions. Even if this technology and results are unique and recognised worldwide, we still do not fully understand flapping flight to the scientific depth needed to go even further. The Robird cannot take off on its own, cannot perch, uses symmetric flapping, steers using a number of manifolds placed on the tail and has a minimal autonomy and a restricted operation time due to power consumption.

This project will make it possible to gain a much deeper structured understanding of flapping flight and experimentally validate these understandings. This will be done using port-Hamiltonian (PH) system theory and its physically unifying character, which will couple fluid dynamics theory to dynamically changing surfaces and their actuation. Once models will be validated by wind tunnel tests with flow visualisation, numerical optimisation will be used to fine tune models and search for uncertain parameters. Based on these findings, artifacts will be built to validate the generated models with real systems. Based on the insight gained, a new robotic bird will be realised with unprecedented flight dexterity, able to flap asymmetrically, adapt to the flow and take off and land as birds do, in order to validate the scientific understandings.

Visit the official PortWings website at http://www.portwings.eu/.

Associated assignments

Port-Hamiltonian Energy-based Control of a Flapping-wing UAV Mohab Abdelbadie
Development of 3D-printed, carbon-fiber reinforced beams for self-sensing wings Matei Drilea
Qualitative flow sensing with 3D-printed sensors for application in a robotic bird Roosmarijn Meijers
A measurement system architecture for strain gauge based sensing on the Robird Sybren Kappert
Modeling, Simulation and Control of a set-up built to study flapping motion Gijs van Rhijn
Potential (passive) flight stabalization and control mechanisms for flapping robotic bird flight Patrick Bos
Development of auxetic structures for variable stiffness beams Laszlo Olk
A geometric port-Hamiltonian modelling and simulation framework for Morphing-Wing UAVs Jorge Raven Garcia
Development of Gazebo-based high-fidelity simulation environment for morphing-wing UAVs Louis Nelissen
Development of a variable stiffness mechanism and energy-based control to study stiffness modulation Pavan Kapisthalam Chetlur
Dynamic energy budgeting and behavioural shaping along complex task execution in robotics using reinforcement learning Siddharth Chaturvedi
Port-Hamiltonian Energy-based Control of a Flapping-wing UAV Mohab Abdelbadie
Controlling deformations of a 3D-printed vibrating beam using stiffness modulation Sander Roodink
will follow Jeroen Haveman
Analysis, simulation and control of the Von Karman Vortex Street behind a circular cylinder Francesco Carullo
Research into 3D Printed Batteries through Electrodeposition Luka Šćulac
Variable stiffness component for flapping wing Giovanni Melandri

Associated assignment proposals