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Design of a Multi-Directional Variable Stiffness Leg for Dynamic Running

Kevin C. Galloway, Jonathan E. Clark, Daniel E. Koditschek

Year
2007
Citations
28

Abstract

Recent developments in dynamic legged locomotion have focused on encoding a substantial component of leg intelligence into passive compliant mechanisms. One of the limitations of this approach is reduced adaptability: the final leg mechanism usually performs optimally for a small range of conditions (i.e. a certain robot weight, terrain, speed, gait, and so forth). For many situations in which a small locomotion system experiences a change in any of these conditions, it is desirable to have a variable stiffness leg to tune the natural frequency of the system for effective gait control. In this paper, we present an overview of variable stiffness leg spring designs, and introduce a new approach specifically for autonomous dynamic legged locomotion. We introduce a simple leg model that captures the spatial compliance of the tunable leg in three dimensions. Lastly, we present the design and manufacture of the multi-directional variable stiffness legs, and experimentally validate their correspondence to the proposed model.

Keywords

Computer scienceAdaptabilityVariable (mathematics)StiffnessGaitTerrainRobotMechanism (biology)Control theory (sociology)Range (aeronautics)

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