Physics World 10月01日
折纸艺术启发的新型降落伞,实现精准无人机投递
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加拿大和法国的研究人员受日本折纸艺术(Kirigami)的启发,设计出一种新型降落伞,能够稳定地垂直下降并精准投递载荷。该降落伞采用可变形设计,通过激光切割的图案改变气流,无需像传统降落伞那样通过倾斜角度来稳定。这种设计简单、成本低廉,在无人机配送和人道主义援助等领域具有巨大潜力。研究人员通过模拟、风洞实验和户外测试验证了其有效性,成功实现了从60米高空精准投递水瓶。

💡 灵感源于折纸艺术:该降落伞的设计灵感来源于日本的折纸艺术(Kirigami),通过在柔性圆盘上进行激光切割和折叠,使其在气流作用下变形,从而实现稳定的垂直下降。

🎯 精准投递的实现:与传统降落伞需要通过倾斜角度来稳定不同,这种新型降落伞通过其可变形的结构稳定气流,无需滑翔即可垂直落向目标,大大提高了投递的准确性,尤其适用于无人机配送和人道主义援助。

🌳 源于自然界启示:除了折纸艺术,研究团队还从自然界中风力传播种子的结构中汲取灵感,例如蒲公英的羽毛状结构和枫树种子的翅膀,这些结构都能够稳定气流,实现被动控制。

⚙️ 简单且易于制造:该降落伞由激光切割的柔性圆盘制成,制造过程简单且成本低廉,只需具备一定刚性的材料即可,无需复杂的手工劳动,这使得其大规模应用成为可能。

🔬 经过严谨验证:研究人员通过数值模拟、风洞实验以及在真实户外环境中进行的测试,包括使用无人机从60米高空投递水瓶,充分验证了该降落伞的设计性能和实际应用效果。

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Inspired by the Japanese art of kirigami, researchers in Canada and France have designed a parachute that can safely and accurately deliver its payloads when dropped directly above its target. Tested in realistic outdoor conditions, the parachute’s deformable design stabilizes the airflow around its porous structure, removing the need to drift as it falls. With its simple and affordable design, the parachute could have especially promising uses in areas including drone delivery and humanitarian aid.

When a conventional parachute is deployed, it cannot simply fall vertically towards its target. To protect itself from turbulence, which can cause its canopy to collapse, it glides at an angle that breaks the symmetry of the airflow around it, stabilizing the parachute against small perturbations.

But this necessity comes at a cost. When dropping a payload from a drone or aircraft, this gliding angle means parachutes will often drift far from their intended targets. This can be especially frustrating and potentially dangerous for operations such as humanitarian aid delivery, where precisely targeted airdrops are often vital to success.

To address this challenge, researchers led by David Mélançon at Polytechnique Montréal looked to kirigami, whereby paper is cut and folded to create elaborate 3D designs. “Previously, kirigami has been used to morph flat sheets into 3D shapes with programmed curvatures,” Mélançon explains. “We proposed to leverage kirigami’s shape morphing capability under fluid flow to design new kinds of ballistic parachutes.”

Wind-dispersed seeds

As well as kirigami, the team drew inspiration from nature. Instead of relying on a gliding angle, many wind-dispersed seeds are equipped with structures that stabilize the airflow around them: including the feathery bristles of dandelion seeds, which create a stabilized vortex in their wake; and the wings of sycamore and maple seeds, which cause them to rapidly spin as they fall. In each case, these mechanisms provide plants with passive control over where their seeds land and germinate.

For their design, Mélançon’s team created a parachute that can deform into a shape pre-programmed by a pattern of kirigami cuts, etched into a flexible disc using a laser cutter. “Our parachutes are simple flat discs, with circumferential slits inspired by a kirigami motif called a closed loop,” Mélançon describes. “Instead of attaching the payload with strings at the outer edge of the disk, we directly mount it its centre.”

When dropped, a combination of air resistance and the weight of the free-falling payload deformed the parachute into an inverted, porous bell shape. “The slits in the kirigami pattern are stretched, forcing air through its multitude of small openings,” Mélançon continues. “This ensures that the air flows in an orderly manner without any major chaotic turbulence, resulting in a predictable trajectory.”

The researchers tested their parachute extensively using numerical simulations combined with wind tunnel experiments and outdoor tests, where they used the parachute to drop a water bottle from a hovering drone. In this case, the parachute delivered its payload safely to the ground from a height of 60 m directly above its target.

Easy to make

Mélançon’s team tested their design with a variety of parachute sizes and kirigami patterns, demonstrating that designs with lower load-to-area ratios and more deformable patterns can reach comparable terminal velocity to conventional parachutes – with far greater certainty over where they will land. Compared with conventional parachutes, which are often both complex and costly to manufacture, kirigami-based designs will be far easier to fabricate.

“Little hand labour is necessary,” Mélançon says. “We have made parachutes out of sheets of plastic, paper or cardboard. We need a sheet of material with a certain rigidity, that’s all.”

By building on their design, the researchers hope that future studies will pave the way for new improvements in package home delivery. It could even advance efforts to deliver urgently needed aid during conflicts and natural disasters to those who need it most.

The parachute is described in Nature.

The post Kirigami-inspired parachute falls on target appeared first on Physics World.

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折纸艺术 降落伞 无人机 精准投递 人道主义援助 Kirigami Parachute Drone Delivery Precision Landing Humanitarian Aid
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