Jellyfish-Inspired Profiling Floats
Navy STTR 2018.A - Topic N18A-T025 ONR - Mr. Steve Sullivan - [email protected] Opens: January 8, 2018 - Closes: February 7, 2018 (8:00 PM ET)
TECHNOLOGY
AREA(S): Battlespace, Sensors ACQUISITION
PROGRAM: Commander, Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command OBJECTIVE:
Develop and demonstrate a jellyfish-inspired autonomous ocean observation float
that makes oceanographic and water quality measurements, stores and transmits
the resulting data, can relay data from Unmanned Underwater Vehicles (UUVs),
and is low-power, with power provided by energy scavenging and sustainable
energy sources. DESCRIPTION:
Current subsurface oceanographic sensing is provided by expensive UUVs and
gliders capable of sampling large areas or by tethered floats or buoys that are
for sampling a restricted area.� The typically passive, distributed,
battery-operated wireless sensor nodes are not desirable as they have limited
station-keeping capability and fixed lifetimes.� The
goal of this research is to develop an autonomous, jellyfish-inspired vehicle
that is capable of conducting autonomous station-keeping in dynamic
environments to act as an oceanographic sensor node for 2-12 months.� These
nodes should be inexpensive so that many of them can be deployed in a region of
interest.� The strategy adopted to accomplish this goal is to implement methods
of underwater propulsion found in biological species. PHASE
I: Conduct a study on the feasibility of a jellyfish-inspired vehicle design,
with a focus on mobility mechanism and power source.� This should draw on prior
biological research on jellyfish kinematics, dynamics, and fluid interactions
to support design of a vehicle with station-keeping in a current of 1-2 cm/sec,
and localized maneuver in the water column.� Identify the most promising
actuation mechanism, including power requirements and expected lifetime.�
Conduct a design study of the feasibility of different sustainable power
sources (e.g., solar, mechanical energy scavenging, microbial fuel cells) and
specify the expected mission duration.� Identify materials with surfaces that
resist fouling.� Develop a Phase II plan. PHASE
II: Fully develop and fabricate a jellyfish-inspired vehicle that has the
payload and structural capability to carry oceanographic sensors (e.g., water
temperature, salinity, ambient noise and turbidity, GPS), sensors to measure
the wave field (directional wave spectra, peak period and direction) and
communication electronics and power systems.� Design a means of projecting an
antenna capable of supporting Iridium communications.� The ability to relay
underwater acoustic communication from another underwater system and transmit
data via radio frequency (RF) should be considered.� The power systems
identified in Phase I should be able to support equipment payloads, as well as
minimal power expenditure for station-keeping and maneuvering.� The vehicle
will be able to maintain a position within a 2-meter radius, including
maneuvering to correct drift and environmental external impacts.� Demonstrate
controlled vertical descent to 50 feet.� Demonstrate the vehicle and a suite of
relevant oceanographic sensors in an ocean environment. PHASE
III DUAL USE APPLICATIONS: Implementation control and maneuverability
optimization, finalize integrated power systems for efficient motion and
increased mission duration, implement energy harvesting such as solar
recharging to indefinitely increase power and duration capabilities, and
improve design reliability and durability for live aquatic environments.� The
improved platform will be tested in simulated and limited live environments to
prove final product viability and final changes for optimal performance.�
Design a plan of employment for multiple jellyfish vehicles including
deployment procedure and strategy for coverage in the face of drift.�
Demonstrate the vehicle in a complete mission scenario for ocean sensing within
an IPOE (Intelligence Preparation of the Operational Environment).� Commercial
applications include scientific oceanography, monitoring of remediation and
ecosystem health, fisheries management, and harbor water monitoring. REFERENCES: 1.
Gemmell, BJ, Troolin, DR, Costello, JH, Colin, SP, and Satterlie RA. �Control
of vortex rings for maneuverability.� J. R. Soc. Interface 2015 12: 20150389. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4528605/ 2.
Villanueva, A., Smith, C., and Priya, S. �A biomimetic robotic jellyfish
(Robojelly) actuated by shape memory alloy composite actuators.� Bioinspiration
& Biomimetics 6(3), 2011, 036004. http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-3182/6/3/036004/meta 3.
Omori, M and Kitamura, M. �Taxonomic review of three Japanese species of edible
jellyfish (Scyphozoa: Rhizostomeae).� Plankton Biology and Ecology 51:36-51. http://www.plankton.jp/PBE/issue/vol51_1/vol51_1_036.pdf 4.
Priya, S. and Inman, D.J. �Energy Harvesting Technologies.� Springer-Verlag. http://www.springer.com/us/book/9780387764634 5.
Tadesse, Y. �Electroactive polymer and shape memory alloy actuators in
biomimetics and humanoids.� Proc. SPIE 8687, Electroactive Polymer Actuators
and Devices (EAPAD) 2013, 868709. http://proceedings.spiedigitallibrary.org/proceeding.aspx?articleid=1677453 6.
Tadesse, Y., Villanueva, A., Haines, C, Novitski, D, Baughman, R., and Priya,
S. �Hydrogen-fuel-powered bell segments of biomimetic jellyfish.� Smart
Materials and Structures, 21(4), 045013. http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0964-1726/21/4/045013/meta 7.
Larkin, M. and Tadesse, Y. �HM-EH-RT: Hybrid multimodal energy harvesting from
rotational and translational motions.� International Journal of Smart and Nano
Materials. 4(4), 257-285. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/19475411.2014.902870 KEYWORDS:
Unmanned Underwater Vehicle; Bio-inspired; Low Energy; Energy Harvesting;
Oceanographic Sensing; Profiling Floats
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