150 research outputs found

    Climbing and Walking Robots

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    Nowadays robotics is one of the most dynamic fields of scientific researches. The shift of robotics researches from manufacturing to services applications is clear. During the last decades interest in studying climbing and walking robots has been increased. This increasing interest has been in many areas that most important ones of them are: mechanics, electronics, medical engineering, cybernetics, controls, and computers. Today’s climbing and walking robots are a combination of manipulative, perceptive, communicative, and cognitive abilities and they are capable of performing many tasks in industrial and non- industrial environments. Surveillance, planetary exploration, emergence rescue operations, reconnaissance, petrochemical applications, construction, entertainment, personal services, intervention in severe environments, transportation, medical and etc are some applications from a very diverse application fields of climbing and walking robots. By great progress in this area of robotics it is anticipated that next generation climbing and walking robots will enhance lives and will change the way the human works, thinks and makes decisions. This book presents the state of the art achievments, recent developments, applications and future challenges of climbing and walking robots. These are presented in 24 chapters by authors throughtot the world The book serves as a reference especially for the researchers who are interested in mobile robots. It also is useful for industrial engineers and graduate students in advanced study

    Enabling Force Sensing During Ground Locomotion: A Bio-Inspired, Multi-Axis, Composite Force Sensor Using Discrete Pressure Mapping

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    This paper presents a new force sensor design approach that maps the local sampling of pressure inside a composite polymeric footpad to forces in three axes, designed for running robots. Conventional multiaxis force sensors made of heavy metallic materials tend to be too bulky and heavy to be fitted in the feet of legged robots, and vulnerable to inertial noise upon high acceleration. To satisfy the requirements for high speed running, which include mitigating high impact forces, protecting the sensors from ground collision, and enhancing traction, these stiff sensors should be paired with additional layers of durable, soft materials; but this also degrades the integrity of the foot structure. The proposed foot sensor is manufactured as a monolithic, composite structure composed of an array of barometric pressure sensors completely embedded in a protective polyurethane rubber layer. This composite architecture allows the layers to provide compliance and traction for foot collision while the deformation and the sampled pressure distribution of the structure can be mapped into three axis force measurement. Normal and shear forces can be measured upon contact with the ground, which causes the footpad to deform and change the readings of the individual pressure sensors in the array. A one-time training process using an artificial neural network is all that is necessary to relate the normal and shear forces with the multiaxis foot sensor output. The results show that the sensor can predict normal forces in the Z-axis up to 300 N with a root mean squared error of 0.66% and up to 80 N in the X- and Y-axis. The experiment results demonstrates a proof-of-concept for a lightweight, low cost, yet robust footpad sensor suitable for use in legged robots undergoing ground locomotion.United States. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Maximum Mobility and Manipulation (M3) ProgramSingapore. Agency for Science, Technology and Researc

    Bio-Inspired Robotics

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    Modern robotic technologies have enabled robots to operate in a variety of unstructured and dynamically-changing environments, in addition to traditional structured environments. Robots have, thus, become an important element in our everyday lives. One key approach to develop such intelligent and autonomous robots is to draw inspiration from biological systems. Biological structure, mechanisms, and underlying principles have the potential to provide new ideas to support the improvement of conventional robotic designs and control. Such biological principles usually originate from animal or even plant models, for robots, which can sense, think, walk, swim, crawl, jump or even fly. Thus, it is believed that these bio-inspired methods are becoming increasingly important in the face of complex applications. Bio-inspired robotics is leading to the study of innovative structures and computing with sensory–motor coordination and learning to achieve intelligence, flexibility, stability, and adaptation for emergent robotic applications, such as manipulation, learning, and control. This Special Issue invites original papers of innovative ideas and concepts, new discoveries and improvements, and novel applications and business models relevant to the selected topics of ``Bio-Inspired Robotics''. Bio-Inspired Robotics is a broad topic and an ongoing expanding field. This Special Issue collates 30 papers that address some of the important challenges and opportunities in this broad and expanding field

    Streamlined sim-to-real transfer for deep-reinforcement learning in robotics locomotion

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    Legged robots possess superior mobility compared to other machines, yet designing controllers for them can be challenging. Classic control methods require engineers to distill their knowledge into controllers, which is time-consuming and limiting when approaching dynamic tasks in unknown environments. Conversely, learning- based methods that gather knowledge from data can potentially unlock the versatility of legged systems. In this thesis, we propose a novel approach called CPG-Actor, which incor- porates feedback into a fully differentiable Central Pattern Generator (CPG) formulation using neural networks and Deep-Reinforcement Learning (RL). This approach achieves approximately twenty times better training performance compared to previous methods and provides insights into the impact of training on the distribution of parameters in both the CPGs and MLP feedback network. Adopting Deep-RL to design controllers comes at the expense of gathering extensive data, typically done in simulation to reduce time. However, controllers trained with data collected in simulation often lose performance when deployed in the real world, referred to as the sim-to-real gap. To address this, we propose a new method called Extended Random Force Injection (ERFI), which randomizes only two parameters to allow for sim-to-real transfer of locomotion controllers. ERFI demonstrated high robustness when varying masses of the base, or attaching a manipulator arm to the robot during testing, and achieved competitive performance comparable to standard randomization techniques. Furthermore, we propose a new method called Roll-Drop to enhance the robustness of Deep-RL policies to observation noise. Roll-Drop introduces dropout during rollout, achieving an 80% success rate when tested with up to 25% noise injected in the observations. Finally, we adopted model-free controllers to enable omni-directional bipedal lo- comotion on point feet with a quadruped robot without any hardware modification or external support. Despite the limitations posed by the quadruped’s hardware, the study considers this a perfect benchmark task to assess the shortcomings of sim- to-real techniques and unlock future avenues for the legged robotics community. Overall, this thesis demonstrates the potential of learning-based methods to design dynamic and robust controllers for legged robots while limiting the effort needed for sim-to-real transfer

    Proprioceptive Invariant Robot State Estimation

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    This paper reports on developing a real-time invariant proprioceptive robot state estimation framework called DRIFT. A didactic introduction to invariant Kalman filtering is provided to make this cutting-edge symmetry-preserving approach accessible to a broader range of robotics applications. Furthermore, this work dives into the development of a proprioceptive state estimation framework for dead reckoning that only consumes data from an onboard inertial measurement unit and kinematics of the robot, with two optional modules, a contact estimator and a gyro filter for low-cost robots, enabling a significant capability on a variety of robotics platforms to track the robot's state over long trajectories in the absence of perceptual data. Extensive real-world experiments using a legged robot, an indoor wheeled robot, a field robot, and a full-size vehicle, as well as simulation results with a marine robot, are provided to understand the limits of DRIFT

    Design of Compliance Assisted Gaits for a Quadrupedal Amphibious Robot

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    The goal of this thesis was to develop an amphibious legged quadrupedal robot and associated gaits. Gaits of interest included walking, swimming, and smoothly transitioning between the two. Compliance was employed in the robot's legs to achieve swimming. Various types and configurations of compliant legs were evaluated using physical experiments and simulation. Three primary, two secondary, and two transition gaits were developed. An algorithm was developed to determine the appropriate course of action based on the current gait performance and the desired performance. The robot developed in this thesis met the goals of the design and demonstrated the technical feasibility of using compliance in amphibious legged robots

    Climbing and Walking Robots

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    With the advancement of technology, new exciting approaches enable us to render mobile robotic systems more versatile, robust and cost-efficient. Some researchers combine climbing and walking techniques with a modular approach, a reconfigurable approach, or a swarm approach to realize novel prototypes as flexible mobile robotic platforms featuring all necessary locomotion capabilities. The purpose of this book is to provide an overview of the latest wide-range achievements in climbing and walking robotic technology to researchers, scientists, and engineers throughout the world. Different aspects including control simulation, locomotion realization, methodology, and system integration are presented from the scientific and from the technical point of view. This book consists of two main parts, one dealing with walking robots, the second with climbing robots. The content is also grouped by theoretical research and applicative realization. Every chapter offers a considerable amount of interesting and useful information

    Combining Sensors and Multibody Models for Applications in Vehicles, Machines, Robots and Humans

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    The combination of physical sensors and computational models to provide additional information about system states, inputs and/or parameters, in what is known as virtual sensing, is becoming increasingly popular in many sectors, such as the automotive, aeronautics, aerospatial, railway, machinery, robotics and human biomechanics sectors. While, in many cases, control-oriented models, which are generally simple, are the best choice, multibody models, which can be much more detailed, may be better suited to some applications, such as during the design stage of a new product
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