Power-Efficient Actuation for Insect-Scale Autonomous Underwater Vehicles
Cody R. Longwell, Conor K. Trygstad, and Nestor O. Perez-Arancibia

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel, power-efficient SMA-based microactuator and demonstrates its application in insect-scale autonomous underwater vehicles, enabling longer operation with onboard power and computation.
Contribution
The paper presents a new low-power SMA microactuator with a sealed air-capsule design, suitable for underwater use, advancing insect-scale autonomous underwater vehicle technology.
Findings
The new actuator operates with approximately 80 mW power in water.
The VLEIBot++ can swim for about 20 minutes on a single charge.
First subgram microswimmer with onboard power, actuation, and computation.
Abstract
We present a new evolution of the Very Little Eel-Inspired roBot, the VLEIBot++, a 900-mg swimmer driven by two 10-mg bare high-work density (HWD) actuators, whose functionality is based on the use of shape-memory alloy (SMA) wires. An actuator of this type consumes an average power of about 40 mW during in-air operation. We integrated onboard power and computation into the VLEIBot++ using a custom-built printed circuit board (PCB) and an 11-mAh 3.7-V 507-mg single-cell lithium-ion (Li-Ion) battery, which in conjunction enable autonomous swimming for about 20 min on a single charge. This robot can swim at speeds of up to 18.7 mm/s (0.46 Bl/s) and is the first subgram microswimmer with onboard power, actuation, and computation developed to date. Unfortunately, the approach employed to actuate VLEIBot++ prototypes is infeasible for underwater applications because a typical 10-mg bare…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUnderwater Vehicles and Communication Systems
