» Articles » PMID: 33137777

Tuna Robotics: A High-frequency Experimental Platform Exploring the Performance Space of Swimming Fishes

Overview
Journal Sci Robot
Date 2020 Nov 2
PMID 33137777
Citations 34
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Tuna and related scombrid fishes are high-performance swimmers that often operate at high frequencies, especially during behaviors such as escaping from predators or catching prey. This contrasts with most fish-like robotic systems that typically operate at low frequencies (< 2 hertz). To explore the high-frequency fish swimming performance space, we designed and tested a new platform based on yellowfin tuna () and Atlantic mackerel (). Body kinematics, speed, and power were measured at increasing tail beat frequencies to quantify swimming performance and to study flow fields generated by the tail. Experimental analyses of freely swimming tuna and mackerel allow comparison with the tuna-like robotic system. The Tunabot (255 millimeters long) can achieve a maximum tail beat frequency of 15 hertz, which corresponds to a swimming speed of 4.0 body lengths per second. Comparison of midline kinematics between scombrid fish and the Tunabot shows good agreement over a wide range of frequencies, with the biggest discrepancy occurring at the caudal fin, primarily due to the rigid propulsor used in the robotic model. As frequency increases, cost of transport (COT) follows a fish-like U-shaped response with a minimum at ~1.6 body lengths per second. The Tunabot has a range of ~9.1 kilometers if it swims at 0.4 meter per second or ~4.2 kilometers at 1.0 meter per second, assuming a 10-watt-hour battery pack. These results highlight the capabilities of high-frequency biological swimming and lay the foundation to explore a fish-like performance space for bio-inspired underwater vehicles.

Citing Articles

The tuna keel is a mechanosensory structure.

Chaumel J, Wainwright D, Webb J, White C, Lauder G iScience. 2025; 28(1):111578.

PMID: 39872710 PMC: 11771206. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.111578.


Mapping spatial patterns to energetic benefits in groups of flow-coupled swimmers.

Heydari S, Hang H, Kanso E Elife. 2024; 13.

PMID: 39700223 PMC: 11658766. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.96129.


Spontaneous snapping-induced jet flows for fast, maneuverable surface and underwater soft flapping swimmer.

Qing H, Guo J, Zhu Y, Chi Y, Hong Y, Quinn D Sci Adv. 2024; 10(49):eadq4222.

PMID: 39630908 PMC: 11616700. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adq4222.


A Novel Aerial-Aquatic Unmanned Vehicle Using Flapping Wings for Underwater Propulsion.

He J, Zhang Y, Feng J, Li S, Yuan Y, Wang P Biomimetics (Basel). 2024; 9(10).

PMID: 39451787 PMC: 11505417. DOI: 10.3390/biomimetics9100581.


Miniature Modular Reconfigurable Underwater Robot Based on Synthetic Jet.

Wang D, Zhang F, Zhang S, Liu D, Li J, Chen W Adv Sci (Weinh). 2024; 11(39):e2406956.

PMID: 39136060 PMC: 11496987. DOI: 10.1002/advs.202406956.