Unified Structural-Hydrodynamic Modeling of Underwater Underactuated Mechanisms and Soft Robots
arXiv:2603.07939v2 Announce Type: replace Abstract: Underwater robots are widely deployed for ocean exploration and manipulation. Underactuated mechanisms are advantageous in aquatic environments because reducing actuator count lowers motor-leakage risk while introducing inherent mechanical compliance. However, accurate modeling of underwater underactuated and soft robotic systems remains challenging, as it requires identifying high-dimensional structural and hydrodynamic parameters. In this wo
Overview
arXiv:2603.07939v2 Announce Type: replace Abstract: Underwater robots are widely deployed for ocean exploration and manipulation. Underactuated mechanisms are advantageous in aquatic environments because reducing actuator count lowers motor-leakage risk while introducing inherent mechanical compliance. However, accurate modeling of underwater underactuated and soft robotic systems remains challenging, as it requires identifying high-dimensional structural and hydrodynamic parameters. In this work, we propose a trajectory-driven global optimization framework for unified structural-hydrodynamic modeling of underwater multibody systems. Inspired by the Covariance Matrix Adaptation Evolution Strategy (CMA-ES), the proposed approach simultaneously identifies coupled elastic, damping, and distributed hydrodynamic parameters through trajectory-level matching between simulated and experimental motion. This enables high-fidelity reproduction of underactuated mechanisms and compliant soft robotic systems in underwater environments, using as little as a single video recording. We first validate the framework on a link-by-link underactuated multibody mechanism, demonstrating accurate identification of distributed hydrodynamic coefficients, with normalized end-effector position error below 5% across multiple trajectories, initial conditions, and both active-passive and fully passive configurations. The modeling strategy is further validated on an asymmetric octopus-inspired soft arm, confirming its effectiveness for compliant soft robotic systems. Finally, eight identified arms are assembled into a swimming octopus robot, where the unified parameter set enables realistic whole-body behavior without additional retuning. These results demonstrate the scalability and transferability of the proposed structural-hydrodynamic modeling framework across underwater underactuated and soft robotic systems.
Source
Originally published at arxiv.org.
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Source: https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.07939