磁电天线有望改变水下机器人的通信方式
Magnetoelectric antennas could transform how underwater robots talk

原始链接: https://newatlas.com/engineering/magnetoelectric-antennas-submarine-robots-communications/

水下机器人历来在通信方面面临挑战,因为无线电波在盐水中会衰减,而声学系统又易受噪声和干扰影响。佛罗里达大学的研究人员开发出了一款名为“BlueME”的开创性天线系统,其灵感源自医疗植入技术。 通过借鉴信号在人体(本质上是盐水)中的传播规律,团队研制出了一种磁电(ME)天线。与传统电天线不同,BlueME 使用了一组紧凑的磁致伸缩和压电材料,这些材料在浸没于水中时效率更高。 该系统在极低频率(35–36 kHz)下运行,在盐水中实现了超过730米的可靠数据传输,且功耗低于10瓦。尽管其数据传输速率适中,但该技术提供了一种稳定且长距离的链路,能够克服障碍物和浑浊度的影响。这一创新实现了水下自主航行器的实时自主性,使其无需浮出水面即可进行任务调整和协调。团队认为这是管理水下探索的一种强大新方式的开端,未来的应用范围涵盖从海底测绘到机队导航等多个领域。

```Hacker News 最新 | 过往 | 评论 | 提问 | 展示 | 招聘 | 提交 登录 磁电天线可能改变水下机器人的通信方式 (newatlas.com) 7 点,由 breve 发布于 2 小时前 | 隐藏 | 过往 | 收藏 | 2 条评论 | 帮助 gus_massa 10 分钟前 | 下一条 [–] 我还在想这怎么可能行得通,直到看到: 其结果是一种在极低频率(约 35–36 kHz)下工作的天线,同时比在该频率下工作的传统电天线要紧凑得多。 他们使用的是超低频。 回复 cyanydeez 11 分钟前 | 上一条 [–] 你可能会认为像乌克兰正在做的那样使用光纤在一定程度上是可行的。 回复 准则 | 常见问题 | 列表 | API | 安全 | 法律 | 加入 YC | 联系 搜索: ```
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原文

Most underwater robots lose contact with the surface the moment they descend. But a new antenna technology, borrowed from the physics of medical implants, is rethinking how submarine machines talk to each other – and to us.

Radio waves are nearly useless beneath the surface. In saltwater, conventional signals attenuate between 1 and 10 dB per meter, limiting range to just a few feet. Acoustic communication works at longer ranges but introduces Doppler distortion (frequency shift from movement), multipath interference (echoes bouncing off the seafloor and surface), and noise that can harm marine life. Optical systems are blazing fast but require a direct line of sight and fail in murky water or when the buildup of microorganisms degrades the lenses. The net result is that most underwater robots today either exchange short status pings or must surface to transmit mission data, severely limiting real-time autonomy.

A new antenna called BlueME has been designed to change this. This new communication system was developed by a team at the University of Florida, and lets autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) exchange data reliably at distances of up to 730 m (2,395 ft) while drawing around 10 watts of power, less than a household LED light bulb.

The work, accepted in the IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering, grew out of an unlikely research background. Project co-lead Adam Khalifa spent years designing miniature wireless implants before he noticed something obvious in hindsight. "At one point it clicked that many of the same physical challenges inside the human body also exist underwater," he explains. "Our body is effectively made of lightly salted water. That realization opened the door to thinking about ocean communication in a completely different way."

BlueME's key innovation is a magnetoelectric (ME) antenna, a device that couples two physical effects in sequence. A magnetic field deforms a magnetostrictive layer made from a material called Metglas, and that mechanical deformation then induces a voltage in an adjacent piezoelectric layer (PZT, a common ceramic used in sensors and actuators). Run the process in reverse, and you have a transmitter. The result is an antenna that operates at very low frequencies, around 35–36 kHz, while remaining far more compact than the conventional electrical antennas that work at those same frequencies.

The full system packs 15 such antennas into a 3x5 array, housed in oil-compensated waterproof enclosures that equalize the crushing hydrostatic pressure at depth. What makes the design counterintuitive is that ME antennas actually improve when submerged. At 36 kHz, the wavelength shrinks from roughly 8,327 m (27,320 ft) in air to just 170 m (558 ft) in freshwater – a compression that dramatically boosts radiation efficiency for small antennas. Running 15 antennas together multiplies radiated power by a factor of 225 compared to a single element; combine that with a matched receiver array, and the theoretical total link improvement reaches approximately 119 dB.

A diagram of the BlueME system, showing how magnetoelectric antennas relay data between a surface operator and a submerged robot

Md Jahidul Islam, Ph.D., and Adam Khalifa, Ph.D./UF

The team ran open-water trials at two sites: Lake Wauburg in Gainesville, Florida (freshwater), and the Florida Gulf Coast (saltwater). In freshwater, BlueME maintained reliable communication at 200 m (656 ft) on just 1 watt. In saltwater, the system detected signals at 730 m (2,395 ft) on under 10 watts – and performance held steady regardless of turbidity, obstacles, or multipath interference.

Data rates sit between 1 Kb/s and 100 Kb/s, far below the gigabit speeds optical systems can achieve in ideal conditions. But speed was never the point. "Imagine the robot pings you back every 10 minutes on how the mission is going, and the operator can make real-time decisions and maybe adapt the mission," says co-lead Md Jahidul Islam.

The paper represents, according to its authors, both the first practical outdoor deployment of ME antennas and the largest Very Low Frequency/Low Frequency array of this type ever built. The team has filed a provisional patent and is seeking funding to refine the hardware and conduct trials aboard full-scale AUVs, with potential applications in cooperative fleet navigation, seafloor mapping, and real-time localization.

"We demonstrated these results with very limited initial resources," Khalifa notes. "With dedicated development and larger-scale deployment, the possibilities become much broader."

"We are talking about the very early days of a very powerful product," adds Islam.

Source: University of Florida

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