Hill-type, bioinspired actuation delivers energy economy in DC motors

Bioinspir Biomim. 2022 Nov 4;17(6). doi: 10.1088/1748-3190/ac9a1a.

Abstract

Electromagnetic motors convert stored energy to mechanical work through a linear force-velocity (FV) relationship. In biological systems, however, muscle actuation is characterized by the hyperbolic FV mechanisms of the Hill muscle-in which a parameterαcharacterizes the degree of nonlinearity. Previous work has shown that bioinspiration in human-engineered systems can contribute favorable mechanical attributes-such as energy efficiency, self-stability, and flexibility, among others. In this study, we first construct an easily amendable, bioinspired electromagnetic motor which produces FV curves that mimic the Hill model of muscle with a high degree of accuracy. A proportional-integral-differential (PID) controller converges the characteristically linear FV relationship of a DC motor to nonlinear Hill-type force outputs. The bioinspired electric motor does a fixed amount of work by lifting a 147.5 g mass, and we record the translational velocity of the mass and the nonlinear applied force of the motor. Under optimized gain coefficients in the PID, the bioinspired motor achieves agreement ofR2>0.99with the Hill muscle model. Studies have shown that designing biologically inspired actuators produce comparatively energy efficient systems. We investigate the energy economy of actuating our motor with nonlinear, Hill-type forces in direct comparison with conventional linear FV actuation techniques. We find that the bioinspired motor delivers energy economy with respect to energy consumption and conversion: the nonlinear, Hill-type DC motor reduces the energetic cost of actuation when delivering a fixed amount of mechanical work.

Keywords: DC motors; Hill muscle; bioinspiration; biomechanics; energy economy; force–velocity.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Models, Biological
  • Muscles*
  • Nonlinear Dynamics*