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03/22/2021 13:29

How insect wings withstand collisions

Claudia Eulitz Presse, Kommunikation und Marketing
Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel

    Researchers from Kiel University want to transfer design strategies of insect wings to technical applications

    About once a second wings of foraging bees collide with small obstacles such as flowers, leaves or branches during flight without suffering major long-term damage. At the same time, they withstand aerodynamic loads effortlessly - yet the fragile structures make up just two percent of the total mass of an insect's body. Scientists from the Zoological Institute at Kiel University (CAU) are investigating how insect wings withstand these different demands without breaking. In an article in the current issue of the journal Advanced Science, they show several special features in the wing structure, thanks to which they are both stable and flexible and can thus adapt to different needs. In the long term, these design strategies could lead to the development of structural elements that are load-bearing, durable and impact resistant at the same time and allow various applications in the fields of robotics, aviation or biomedicine.

    Technical structures often fulfil only one of the two properties: either they can withstand large loads - such as stable load-bearing components in buildings - or they are durable and flexible that yield in the event of external impacts such as a collision so as not to break. If both capabilities could be combined, structural elements with “variable stiffness” could be developed which function more efficiently by changing their deformability in response to the change in their external environment. Previous studies, however, apply complicated and costly approaches which make them difficult to be used in everyday life applications.

    Three elements in the design of the insects’ wings allow flexible adaptation

    "What currently moves the engineering community, insects have already perfected: Thanks to a special design, their wings can adopt different degrees of flexibility, depending on what the situation requires," says Professor Stanislav Gorb from the working group "Functional Morphology and Biomechanics", summarising the result of the study. Until now, biological research on insect wings has mostly focused on aerodynamic aspects. In spite of following this trend, the researchers from the Zoological Institute took instead a closer look at the structure of insect wings, here dragonfly wings. For the first time, they connected three different structural elements of the wing structure with their function: they ensure that collisions and wind forces cannot harm insects during their flight: flexible joints, mechanical stoppers and buckling zones.

    Dragonfly wings consist of rigid vein network and membranous areas between them. The veins are connected by flexible joints. These allow the wings to deform under relatively small loads. Under higher loads, microscopic spikes in the proximity of the microjoints interlock and stop the deformation. They increase the stiffness to support the wing against aerodynamic loads. And finally, special zones in the wing reversibly buckle to a certain extent in the event of a collision with an obstacle. "Thanks to these three design strategies, insects can change the characteristics of their wings and thus fulfil several functions at the same time”, says Ph.D. student Ali Khaheshi, first author of the study.

    Design strategies successfully transferred to an aircraft model

    But the research team went one step further: to test whether their theory about the design strategies of insect wings also stands up to practical application, they applied it to an aircraft model with a size of 8 x 5 x 1.1 cm and a weight of 3.8 g. They 3D printed it from PLA / PLH filament and performed both collision and free fall tests. It turned out that the wings survived the collisions, while conventionally constructed aircraft models broke. In addition, they performed static, dynamic and fatigue tests with slightly modified constructions in which they omitted one of the design strategies in each case. "These experiments confirm that it takes all three design strategies in combination to gain the observed mechanical performances," says the engineer and materials scientist Khaheshi. This could also work with other, higher-quality materials, the researchers assume.

    The main point is, that the strategies are already integrated into the structure of the wings and function fully passive, there is no requirement for complex control strategies. "Such insights from biology could help us to construct technical systems that adapt autonomously to extreme or unforeseen situations - for example, in environments where humans cannot actively intervene, such as in space missions," says Dr. Hamed Rajabi.

    Photos are available to download:

    http://www.uni-kiel.de/de/pressemitteilungen/2021/063-Fluegelstruktur-1.jpg
    Caption: About once a second wings of foraging insects collide with small obstacles such as flowers, leaves or branches during flight without suffering major long-term damage.
    © Stanislav Gorb

    http://www.uni-kiel.de/de/pressemitteilungen/2021/063-Fluegelstruktur-2.jpg
    Caption: Three structural design elements of the wing structure ensure that collisions and wind forces cannot harm insects during their flight: flexible joints, mechanical stoppers and buckling zones.
    © Hamed Rajabi

    http://www.uni-kiel.de/de/pressemitteilungen/2021/063-Fluegelstruktur-3.jpg
    Caption: The scientists also applied the design strategies of the insect wings to an aircraft model: (1) flexible joints, (2) buckling zones and (3) mechanical stoppers.
    © Ali Khaheshi

    http://www.uni-kiel.de/de/pressemitteilungen/2021/063-Fluegelstruktur-4.jpg
    Caption: The model was 3D printed with a size of 8 x 5 x 1.1 cm and a weight of 3.8 g and put to both collision and free fall tests.
    © Ali Khaheshi


    Contact for scientific information:

    Professor Dr. Stanislav Gorb
    Functional Morphology and Biomechanics, Kiel University
    Tel.: +49 431 880-4513
    Email: sgorb@zoologie.uni-kiel.de
    Web: http://www.sgorb.zoologie.uni-kiel.de/

    Dr. Hamed Rajabi
    Tel.: +49 431 880 4506
    Emails: hrajabi@zoologie.uni-kiel.de; harajabi@hotmail.com
    Web: https://hamedrajabi.com/

    Ali Khaheshi
    Tel.: +49 (0)431 880-4859
    Emails: akhaheshi@zoologie.uni-kiel.de, akhaheshi@hotmail.com


    Original publication:

    Triple Stiffness: A Bioinspired Strategy to Combine Load-Bearing, Durability, and Impact-Resistance. Ali Khaheshi, Stanislav Gorb, Hamed Rajabi, Adv. Sci. 2021, 2004338, 18 March 2021, DOI: 10.1002/advs.202004338, https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202004338


    More information:

    video for more information
    https://www.uni-kiel.de/en/details/news/063-wing-structure link to press release
    https://www.kinsis.uni-kiel.de/en Understanding structures and processes in the nano dimensions and implementing the findings in an application-oriented manner is the goal of the interdisciplinary priority research area KiNSIS (Kiel Nano, Surface and Interface Science) at Kiel University


    Images

    Three structural design elements of the wing structure ensure that collisions and wind forces cannot harm insects during their flight: flexible joints, mechanical stoppers and buckling zones.
    Three structural design elements of the wing structure ensure that collisions and wind forces cannot ...

    Copyright: Hamed Rajabi

    The scientists also applied the design strategies of the insect wings to an aircraft model: (1) flexible joints, (2) buckling zones and (3) mechanical stoppers.
    The scientists also applied the design strategies of the insect wings to an aircraft model: (1) flex ...

    Copyright: Ali Khaheshi


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, Scientists and scholars
    Biology, Materials sciences, Mechanical engineering
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

    Three structural design elements of the wing structure ensure that collisions and wind forces cannot harm insects during their flight: flexible joints, mechanical stoppers and buckling zones.


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    The scientists also applied the design strategies of the insect wings to an aircraft model: (1) flexible joints, (2) buckling zones and (3) mechanical stoppers.


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