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Main Authors: Jafarpour, Mohsen, Yüksek, Ayberk, Eshghi, Shahab, Gorb, Stanislav, Milana, Edoardo
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.18330
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author Jafarpour, Mohsen
Yüksek, Ayberk
Eshghi, Shahab
Gorb, Stanislav
Milana, Edoardo
author_facet Jafarpour, Mohsen
Yüksek, Ayberk
Eshghi, Shahab
Gorb, Stanislav
Milana, Edoardo
contents Snapping beams enable rapid geometric transitions through nonlinear instability, offering an efficient means of generating motion in soft robotic systems. In this study, a tendon-driven mechanism consisting of spiral-based metabeams was developed to exploit this principle for producing both reciprocating and non-reciprocating motion. The snapping structures were fabricated using fused deposition modeling with polylactic acid (PLA) and experimentally tested under different boundary conditions to analyze their nonlinear behavior. The results show that the mechanical characteristics, including critical forces and stability, can be tuned solely by adjusting the boundary constraints. The spiral geometry allows large reversible deformation even when made from a relatively stiff material such as PLA, providing a straightforward design concept for controllable snapping behavior. The developed mechanism was further integrated into a swimming robot, where tendon-driven fins exhibited two distinct actuation modes: reciprocating and non-reciprocating motion. The latter enabled efficient propulsion, producing a forward displacement of about 32 mm per 0.4 s cycle ($\approx$ 81 mm/s, equivalent to 0.4 body lengths per second). This study highlights the potential of geometry-driven snapping structures for efficient and programmable actuation in soft robotic systems.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_18330
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Tendon-Driven Reciprocating and Non-Reciprocating Motion via Snapping Metabeams
Jafarpour, Mohsen
Yüksek, Ayberk
Eshghi, Shahab
Gorb, Stanislav
Milana, Edoardo
Robotics
Snapping beams enable rapid geometric transitions through nonlinear instability, offering an efficient means of generating motion in soft robotic systems. In this study, a tendon-driven mechanism consisting of spiral-based metabeams was developed to exploit this principle for producing both reciprocating and non-reciprocating motion. The snapping structures were fabricated using fused deposition modeling with polylactic acid (PLA) and experimentally tested under different boundary conditions to analyze their nonlinear behavior. The results show that the mechanical characteristics, including critical forces and stability, can be tuned solely by adjusting the boundary constraints. The spiral geometry allows large reversible deformation even when made from a relatively stiff material such as PLA, providing a straightforward design concept for controllable snapping behavior. The developed mechanism was further integrated into a swimming robot, where tendon-driven fins exhibited two distinct actuation modes: reciprocating and non-reciprocating motion. The latter enabled efficient propulsion, producing a forward displacement of about 32 mm per 0.4 s cycle ($\approx$ 81 mm/s, equivalent to 0.4 body lengths per second). This study highlights the potential of geometry-driven snapping structures for efficient and programmable actuation in soft robotic systems.
title Tendon-Driven Reciprocating and Non-Reciprocating Motion via Snapping Metabeams
topic Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.18330