503 research outputs found
Asymptotically Stable Walking of a Five-Link Underactuated 3D Bipedal Robot
This paper presents three feedback controllers that achieve an asymptotically
stable, periodic, and fast walking gait for a 3D (spatial) bipedal robot
consisting of a torso, two legs, and passive (unactuated) point feet. The
contact between the robot and the walking surface is assumed to inhibit yaw
rotation. The studied robot has 8 DOF in the single support phase and 6
actuators. The interest of studying robots with point feet is that the robot's
natural dynamics must be explicitly taken into account to achieve balance while
walking. We use an extension of the method of virtual constraints and hybrid
zero dynamics, in order to simultaneously compute a periodic orbit and an
autonomous feedback controller that realizes the orbit. This method allows the
computations to be carried out on a 2-DOF subsystem of the 8-DOF robot model.
The stability of the walking gait under closed-loop control is evaluated with
the linearization of the restricted Poincar\'e map of the hybrid zero dynamics.
Three strategies are explored. The first strategy consists of imposing a
stability condition during the search of a periodic gait by optimization. The
second strategy uses an event-based controller. In the third approach, the
effect of output selection is discussed and a pertinent choice of outputs is
proposed, leading to stabilization without the use of a supplemental
event-based controller
3LP: a linear 3D-walking model including torso and swing dynamics
In this paper, we present a new model of biped locomotion which is composed
of three linear pendulums (one per leg and one for the whole upper body) to
describe stance, swing and torso dynamics. In addition to double support, this
model has different actuation possibilities in the swing hip and stance ankle
which could be widely used to produce different walking gaits. Without the need
for numerical time-integration, closed-form solutions help finding periodic
gaits which could be simply scaled in certain dimensions to modulate the motion
online. Thanks to linearity properties, the proposed model can provide a
computationally fast platform for model predictive controllers to predict the
future and consider meaningful inequality constraints to ensure feasibility of
the motion. Such property is coming from describing dynamics with joint torques
directly and therefore, reflecting hardware limitations more precisely, even in
the very abstract high level template space. The proposed model produces
human-like torque and ground reaction force profiles and thus, compared to
point-mass models, it is more promising for precise control of humanoid robots.
Despite being linear and lacking many other features of human walking like CoM
excursion, knee flexion and ground clearance, we show that the proposed model
can predict one of the main optimality trends in human walking, i.e. nonlinear
speed-frequency relationship. In this paper, we mainly focus on describing the
model and its capabilities, comparing it with human data and calculating
optimal human gait variables. Setting up control problems and advanced
biomechanical analysis still remain for future works.Comment: Journal paper under revie
Real-Time Planning with Primitives for Dynamic Walking over Uneven Terrain
We present an algorithm for receding-horizon motion planning using a finite
family of motion primitives for underactuated dynamic walking over uneven
terrain. The motion primitives are defined as virtual holonomic constraints,
and the special structure of underactuated mechanical systems operating subject
to virtual constraints is used to construct closed-form solutions and a special
binary search tree that dramatically speed up motion planning. We propose a
greedy depth-first search and discuss improvement using energy-based
heuristics. The resulting algorithm can plan several footsteps ahead in a
fraction of a second for both the compass-gait walker and a planar
7-Degree-of-freedom/five-link walker.Comment: Conference submissio
Dynamic Walking: Toward Agile and Efficient Bipedal Robots
Dynamic walking on bipedal robots has evolved from an idea in science fiction to a practical reality. This is due to continued progress in three key areas: a mathematical understanding of locomotion, the computational ability to encode this mathematics through optimization, and the hardware capable of realizing this understanding in practice. In this context, this review article outlines the end-to-end process of methods which have proven effective in the literature for achieving dynamic walking on bipedal robots. We begin by introducing mathematical models of locomotion, from reduced order models that capture essential walking behaviors to hybrid dynamical systems that encode the full order continuous dynamics along with discrete footstrike dynamics. These models form the basis for gait generation via (nonlinear) optimization problems. Finally, models and their generated gaits merge in the context of real-time control, wherein walking behaviors are translated to hardware. The concepts presented are illustrated throughout in simulation, and experimental instantiation on multiple walking platforms are highlighted to demonstrate the ability to realize dynamic walking on bipedal robots that is agile and efficient
Review of Quadruped Robots for Dynamic Locomotion
This review introduces quadruped robots: MITCheetah, HyQ, ANYmal, BigDog, and
their mechanical structure, actuation, and control
An Efficiently Solvable Quadratic Program for Stabilizing Dynamic Locomotion
We describe a whole-body dynamic walking controller implemented as a convex
quadratic program. The controller solves an optimal control problem using an
approximate value function derived from a simple walking model while respecting
the dynamic, input, and contact constraints of the full robot dynamics. By
exploiting sparsity and temporal structure in the optimization with a custom
active-set algorithm, we surpass the performance of the best available
off-the-shelf solvers and achieve 1kHz control rates for a 34-DOF humanoid. We
describe applications to balancing and walking tasks using the simulated Atlas
robot in the DARPA Virtual Robotics Challenge.Comment: 6 pages, published at ICRA 201
Impact-Aware Online Motion Planning for Fully-Actuated Bipedal Robot Walking
The ability to track a general walking path with specific timing is crucial
to the operational safety and reliability of bipedal robots for avoiding
dynamic obstacles, such as pedestrians, in complex environments. This paper
introduces an online, full-body motion planner that generates the desired
impact-aware motion for fully-actuated bipedal robotic walking. The main
novelty of the proposed planner lies in its capability of producing desired
motions in real-time that respect the discrete impact dynamics and the desired
impact timing. To derive the proposed planner, a full-order hybrid dynamic
model of fully-actuated bipedal robotic walking is presented, including both
continuous dynamics and discrete lading impacts. Next, the proposed
impact-aware online motion planner is introduced. Finally, simulation results
of a 3-D bipedal robot are provided to confirm the effectiveness of the
proposed online impact-aware planner. The online planner is capable of
generating full-body motion of one walking step within 0.6 second, which is
shorter than a typical bipedal walking step
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