135 research outputs found

    Rapid inversion: running animals and robots swing like a pendulum under ledges.

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    Escaping from predators often demands that animals rapidly negotiate complex environments. The smallest animals attain relatively fast speeds with high frequency leg cycling, wing flapping or body undulations, but absolute speeds are slow compared to larger animals. Instead, small animals benefit from the advantages of enhanced maneuverability in part due to scaling. Here, we report a novel behavior in small, legged runners that may facilitate their escape by disappearance from predators. We video recorded cockroaches and geckos rapidly running up an incline toward a ledge, digitized their motion and created a simple model to generalize the behavior. Both species ran rapidly at 12-15 body lengths-per-second toward the ledge without braking, dove off the ledge, attached their feet by claws like a grappling hook, and used a pendulum-like motion that can exceed one meter-per-second to swing around to an inverted position under the ledge, out of sight. We discovered geckos in Southeast Asia can execute this escape behavior in the field. Quantification of these acrobatic behaviors provides biological inspiration toward the design of small, highly mobile search-and-rescue robots that can assist us during natural and human-made disasters. We report the first steps toward this new capability in a small, hexapedal robot

    Biorobotics: Using robots to emulate and investigate agile animal locomotion

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    The graceful and agile movements of animals are difficult to analyze and emulate because locomotion is the result of a complex interplay of many components: the central and peripheral nervous systems, the musculoskeletal system, and the environment. The goals of biorobotics are to take inspiration from biological principles to design robots that match the agility of animals, and to use robots as scientific tools to investigate animal adaptive behavior. Used as physical models, biorobots contribute to hypothesis testing in fields such as hydrodynamics, biomechanics, neuroscience, and prosthetics. Their use may contribute to the design of prosthetic devices that more closely take human locomotion principles into account

    Locomotion of Low-DoF Multi-legged Robots

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    Multi-legged robots inspired by insects and other arthropods have unique advantages when compared with bipedal and quadrupedal robots. Their sprawled posture provides stability, and allows them to utilize low-DoF legs which are easier to build and control. With low-DoF legs and multiple contacts with the environment, low-DoF multi-legged robots are usually over constrained if no slipping is allowed. This makes them intrinsically different from the classic bipedal and quadrupedal robots which have high-DoF legs and fewer contacts with the environment. Here we study the unique characteristics of low-DoF multi-legged robots, in terms of design, mobility and modeling. One key observation we prove is that 1-DoF multi-legged robots must slip to be able to steer in the plane. Slipping with multiple contacts makes it difficult to model these robots and their locomotion. Therefore, instead of relying on models, our primary strategy has been careful experimental study. We designed and built our own customized robots which are easily reconfigurable to accommodate a variety of research requirements. In this dissertation we present two robot platforms, BigAnt and Multipod, which demonstrate our design and fabrication methods for low-cost rapidly fabricated modular robotic platforms. BigAnt is a hexapedal robot with 1-DoF legs, whose chassis is constructed from foam board and fiber tape, and costs less than 20 USD in total; Multipod is a highly modular multi-legged robot that can be easily assembled to have different numbers of 2-DoF legs (4 to 12 legs discussed here). We conducted a detailed analysis of steering, including proposing a formal definition of steering gaits grounded in geometric mechanics, and demonstrated the intrinsic difference between legged steering and wheeled steering. We designed gaits for walking, steering, undulating, stair climbing, turning in place, and more, and experimentally tested all these gaits on our robot platforms with detailed motion tracking. Through the theoretical analyses and the experimental tests, we proved that allowing slipping is beneficial for improving the steering in our robots. Where conventional modeling strategies struggle due to multi-contact slipping, we made a significant scientific discovery: that multi-legged locomotion with slipping is often geometric in the sense known from the study of low Reynolds number swimmers and non-holonomic wheeled snake robots which have continuous contact with the environment. We noted that motion can be geometric ``on average'', i.e. stride to stride, and can be truly instantaneously geometric. For each of these we developed a data-driven modeling approach that allowed us to analyze the degree to which a motion is geometric, and applied the analysis to BigAnt and Multipod. These models can also be used for robot motion planning. To explore the mechanism behind the geometric motion characteristics of these robots, we proposed a spring supported multi-legged model. We tested the simulation based on this model against experimental data for all the systems we studied: BigAnt, Multipod, Mechapod (a variant of 6-legged Multipod) and cockroaches. The model prediction results captures many key features of system velocity profiles, but still showed some systematic errors (which can be alleviated ad-hoc). Our work shows the promise of low-DoF multi-legged robots as a class of robotic platforms that are easy to build and simulate, and have many of the mobility advantages of legged systems without the difficulties in stability and control that appear in robots with four or fewer legs.PHDMechanical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/169985/1/danzhaoy_1.pd

    Biologically Inspired Climbing with a Hexapedal Robot

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    This paper presents an integrated, systems-level view of several novel design and control features associated with the biologically inspired, hexapedal, RiSE (Robots in Scansorial Environments) robot. RiSE is the first legged machine capable of locomotion on both the ground and a variety of vertical building surfaces including brick, stucco, and crushed stone at speeds up to 4 cm/s, quietly and without the use of suction, magnets, or adhesives. It achieves these capabilities through a combination of bioinspired and traditional design methods. This paper describes the design process and specifically addresses body morphology, hierarchical compliance in the legs and feet, and sensing and control systems that enable robust and reliable climbing on difficult surfaces. Experimental results illustrate the effects of various behaviors on climbing performance and demonstrate the robot\u27s ability to climb reliably for long distances

    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
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