11,227 research outputs found
Towards an Autonomous Walking Robot for Planetary Surfaces
In this paper, recent progress in the development of
the DLR Crawler - a six-legged, actively compliant walking
robot prototype - is presented. The robot implements
a walking layer with a simple tripod and a more complex
biologically inspired gait. Using a variety of proprioceptive
sensors, different reflexes for reactively crossing obstacles
within the walking height are realised. On top of
the walking layer, a navigation layer provides the ability
to autonomously navigate to a predefined goal point in
unknown rough terrain using a stereo camera. A model
of the environment is created, the terrain traversability is
estimated and an optimal path is planned. The difficulty
of the path can be influenced by behavioral parameters.
Motion commands are sent to the walking layer and the
gait pattern is switched according to the estimated terrain
difficulty. The interaction between walking layer and navigation
layer was tested in different experimental setups
Computational intelligence approaches to robotics, automation, and control [Volume guest editors]
No abstract available
3D environment mapping using the Kinect V2 and path planning based on RRT algorithms
This paper describes a 3D path planning system that is able to provide a solution trajectory for the automatic control of a robot. The proposed system uses a point cloud obtained from the robot workspace, with a Kinect V2 sensor to identify the interest regions and the obstacles of the environment. Our proposal includes a collision-free path planner based on the Rapidly-exploring Random Trees variant (RRT*), for a safe and optimal navigation of robots in 3D spaces. Results on RGB-D segmentation and recognition, point cloud processing, and comparisons between different RRT* algorithms, are presented.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Printing-while-moving: a new paradigm for large-scale robotic 3D Printing
Building and Construction have recently become an exciting application ground
for robotics. In particular, rapid progress in materials formulation and in
robotics technology has made robotic 3D Printing of concrete a promising
technique for in-situ construction. Yet, scalability remains an important
hurdle to widespread adoption: the printing systems (gantry- based or
arm-based) are often much larger than the structure to be printed, hence
cumbersome. Recently, a mobile printing system - a manipulator mounted on a
mobile base - was proposed to alleviate this issue: such a system, by moving
its base, can potentially print a structure larger than itself. However, the
proposed system could only print while being stationary, imposing thereby a
limit on the size of structures that can be printed in a single take. Here, we
develop a system that implements the printing-while-moving paradigm, which
enables printing single-piece structures of arbitrary sizes with a single
robot. This development requires solving motion planning, localization, and
motion control problems that are specific to mobile 3D Printing. We report our
framework to address those problems, and demonstrate, for the first time, a
printing-while-moving experiment, wherein a 210 cm x 45 cm x 10 cm concrete
structure is printed by a robot arm that has a reach of 87 cm.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figur
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