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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
February
Biologically inspired sensors
can augment sonar, vision system in submarines
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Chang
Liu, a
Willett Scholar and a professor of electrical
and computer engineering at Illinois, holds one of
the models (also below) that he and his postdoctoral
research assoociate, Yingchen Yang, are using to
test their artificial lateral line. Their
research could assist autonomous underwater
robots.
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Photo
courtesy Chang Liu |
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Released
2/21/07
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
To find prey and avoid being preyed upon, fish rely on a row of specialized
sensory organs along the sides of their bodies, called the lateral line.
Now, a research team led by Chang Liu at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign has built an artificial lateral line that can provide
the same functions in underwater vehicles.
“Our development of an artificial lateral line is aimed at enhancing
human ability to detect, navigate and survive in the underwater environment,”
said Liu, a Willett Scholar and a professor of electrical
and computer engineering at Illinois. “Our goal is to develop
an artificial device that mimics the functions and capabilities of the
biological system.”
In fish, the lateral line provides guidance for synchronized swimming,
predator and obstacle avoidance, and prey detection and tracking. Equipped
with an artificial lateral line, a submarine or underwater robot could
similarly detect and track moving underwater targets, and avoid collisions
with moving or stationary objects.
The artificial lateral line consists of an integrated linear array of
micro fabricated flow sensors, with the sizes of individual sensors
and spacings between them matching those of their biological counterpart.
“By detecting changes in water pressure and movement, the device
can supplement sonar and vision systems in submarines and underwater
robots,” said Liu, who also is affiliated with the university’s
Beckman Institute for Advanced
Science and Technology, the Institute
for Genomic Biology, and the Micro
and Nanotechnology Laboratory.
Liu and colleagues at Illinois and at Bowling Green State University
described their work in the Dec. 12, 2006, issue of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
To fabricate the tiny, three-dimensional structures, individual components
are first cast in place on sacrificial layers using photolithography
and planar deposition. A small amount of magnetic material is electroplated
onto each of the parts, which are then freed from the substrate by an
etchant. When a magnetic field is applied, the induced torque causes
the pieces to rotate out of the plane on tiny hinges and lock into place.
Each sensor is integrated with metal-oxide-superconductor circuitry
for on-chip signal processing, noise reduction and data acquisition.
The largest array the researchers have built consists of 16 flow sensors
with 1 millimeter spacing. Each sensor is 400 microns wide and 600 microns
tall.
In tests, the researchers’ artificial lateral line was able to
localize a nearby underwater vibrating source, and could detect the
hydrodynamic wake (such as the wake formed behind a propeller-driven
submarine) for long-distance tracking. With further advances in engineering,
man-made underwater vehicles should be able to autonomously image hydrodynamic
events from their surroundings, Liu said.
“Although biology remains far superior to human engineering, having
a man-made parallel of the biological system allows us to learn much
about both basic science and engineering,” Liu said. “To
actively learn from biology at the molecular, cellular, tissue and organism
level is still the bigger picture.”
The work was funded by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research
and by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
Editor’s note: To reach Chang Liu, call
217-333-4051; e-mail: changliu@uiuc.edu.
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