Control Effectiveness Analysis of the hawkmoth Manduca sexta: a Multibody Dynamics Approach
Joong-Kwan Kim and Jae-Hung Han
International Journal of Aeronautical and Space Sicences, vol. 14, no. 2, pp.152-161, 2013
Abstract : This paper presents a control effectiveness analysis of the hawkmoth Manduca sexta. A multibody dynamic model of the
insect that considers the time-varying inertia of two flapping wings is established, based on measurement data from the
real hawkmoth. A six-degree-of-freedom (6-DOF) multibody flight dynamics simulation environment is used to analyze the
effectiveness of the control variables defined in a wing kinematics function. The aerodynamics from complex wing flapping
motions is estimated by a blade element approach, including translational and rotational force coefficients derived from
relevant experimental studies. Control characteristics of flight dynamics with respect to the changes of three angular degrees
of freedom (stroke positional, feathering, and deviation angle) of the wing kinematics are investigated. Results show that the
symmetric (asymmetric) wing kinematics change of each wing only affects the longitudinal (lateral) flight forces and moments,
which implies that the longitudinal and lateral flight controls are decoupled. However, there are coupling effects within each
plane of motion. In the longitudinal plane, pitch and forward/backward motion controls are coupled; in the lateral plane, roll
and side-translation motion controls are coupled.
Keyword : hawkmoth Manduca sexta, control effectiveness, flight dynamics, insect-inspired, flapping-wing MAVs, multibody dynamics |