233 research outputs found
Thrust control, stabilization and energetics of a quadruped running robot
In order to achieve powered autonomous running robots it is essential to develop efficient actuator systems, especially for generating the radial thrust in the legs. In addition, the control of the radial thrust of the legs can be a simple, effective method for stabilizing the body pitch in a running gait. This paper presents the mechanical systems, models and control strategies employed to generate and control leg thrust in the KOLT quadruped running robot. An analytical model of the electro-pneumatic leg thrusting system is presented and analyzed to evaluate its performance and to facilitate the design of control strategies. Several experiments have been conducted to estimate the energy losses and determine their origins as well as to compute the energetic efficiency of the actuation system. Two thrust control methods are also proposed and tested experimentally. The closed loop method regulates thrust through the control of the hip liftoff speed, a conceptually simple control strategy that stabilizes the body pitch in pronk and trot gaits without the need for central feedback, even on irregular terrain. The open-loop control method regulates the energy added in each hop based on the model of the actuator system. The efficacy of these models and techniques is tested in several planar trot and pronk experiments, and the results are analyzed focusing on the body stabilization, the power consumption and the energetic efficiency. © SAGE Publications 2008 Los Angeles
Towards the Use of Dielectric Elastomer Actuators as Locomotive Devices for Millimeter-Scale Robots
Dielectric elastomer actuators (DEAs) are electromechanical transducers that are promising for small scale applications. The work presented in this thesis seeks to develop DEAs as an actuation technology that would serve the purpose of ambulating millimeter-scale robots in a robust and predictable manner. To begin, the "planar" DEA configuration was characterized and the performances of various elastomers were investigated. Then, based on the requirements of a proposed robot walking gait, two principles were examined as means of converting in-plane actuation strain to bending actuation. Bending DEAs were fabricated and tested, and a maximum end displacement of 1.5 mm was achieved for a 10 mm long sample. Bending actuator design was optimized by maximizing both speed and payload capabilities. Finally, some challenges facing the design of robots ambulated by DEAs were outlined; of particular note is the DEAs' electrostatic interaction with each other and their surroundings
A Tendon-Driven Origami Hopper Triggered by Proprioceptive Contact Detection
We report on experiments with a laptop-sized (0.23m, 2.53kg), paper origami robot that exhibits highly dynamic and stable two degree-of-freedom (circular boom) hopping at speeds in excess of 1.5 bl/s (body-lengths per second) at a specific resistance O(1) while achieving aerial phase apex states 25% above the stance height over thousands of cycles. Three conventional brushless DC motors load energy into the folded paper springs through pulley-borne cables whose sudden loss of tension upon touchdown triggers the release of spring potential that accelerates the body back through liftoff to flight with a 20W powerstroke, whereupon the toe angle is adjusted to regulate fore-aft speed. We also demonstrate in the vertical hopping mode the transparency of this actuation scheme by using proprioceptive contact detection with only motor encoder sensing. The combination of actuation and sensing shows potential to lower system complexity for tendon-driven robots.
For more information: Kod*lab (link to kodlab.seas.upenn.edu
Technical Report on: Tripedal Dynamic Gaits for a Quadruped Robot
A vast number of applications for legged robots entail tasks in complex,
dynamic environments. But these environments put legged robots at high risk for
limb damage. This paper presents an empirical study of fault tolerant dynamic
gaits designed for a quadrupedal robot suffering from a single, known
``missing'' limb. Preliminary data suggests that the featured gait controller
successfully anchors a previously developed planar monopedal hopping template
in the three-legged spatial machine. This compositional approach offers a
useful and generalizable guide to the development of a wider range of tripedal
recovery gaits for damaged quadrupedal machines.Comment: Updated *increased font size on figures 2-6 *added a legend, replaced
text with colors in figure 5a and 6a *made variables representing vectors
boldface in equations 8-10 *expanded on calculations in equations 8-10 by
adding additional lines *added a missing "2" to equation 8 (typo) *added mass
of the robot to tables II and III *increased the width of figures 1 and
An Overview of Legged Robots
The objective of this paper is to present the evolution and the state-of-theart in the area of legged locomotion systems. In a first phase different possibilities for mobile robots are discussed, namely the case of artificial legged locomotion systems, while emphasizing their advantages and limitations. In a second phase an historical overview of the evolution of these systems is presented, bearing in mind several particular cases often considered as milestones on the technological and scientific progress. After this historical timeline, some of the present day systems are examined and their performance is analyzed. In a third phase are pointed out the major areas for research and development that are presently being followed in the construction of legged robots. Finally, some of the problems still unsolved, that remain defying robotics research, are also addressed.N/
Adaptive control of a one-legged hopping robot through dynamically embedded spring-loaded inverted pendulum template
Ankara : The Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering and the Graduate School of Engineering and Science of Bilkent University, 2011.Thesis (Master's) -- Bilkent University, 2011.Includes bibliographical references leaves 92-96.Practical realization of model-based dynamic legged behaviors is substantially
more challenging than statically stable behaviors due to their heavy dependence
on second-order system dynamics. This problem is further aggravated by the dif-
ficulty of accurately measuring or estimating dynamic parameters such as spring
and damping constants for associated models and the fact that such parameters
are prone to change in time due to heavy use and associated material fatigue.
In the first part of this thesis, we present an on-line, model-based adaptive control
method for running with a planar spring-mass hopper based on a once-per-step
parameter correction scheme. Our method can be used both as a system identifi-
cation tool to determine possibly time-varying spring and damping constants of a
miscalibrated system, or as an adaptive controller that can eliminate steady-state
tracking errors through appropriate adjustments on dynamic system parameters.
We use Spring-Loaded Inverted Pendulum (SLIP) model, which is the mostly
used, effective and accurate descriptive tool for running animals of different sizes
and morphologies, to evaluate our algorithm. We present systematic simulation
studies to show that our method can successfully accomplish both accurate tracking
and system identification tasks on this model. Additionally, we extend our
simulations to Torque-Actuated Dissipative Spring-Loaded Inverted Pendulum
(TD-SLIP) model towards its implementation on an actual robot platform.
In the second part of the thesis, we present the design and construction of a onelegged
hopping robot we built to test the practical applicability of our adaptive
control algorithm. We summarize the mechanical, electronics and software design
of our robot as well as the performed system identification studies to calibrate the
unknown system parameters. Finally, we investigate the robot’s motion achieved
by a simple torque-actuated open loop controller.Uyanık, İsmailM.S
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