Home /Research /Bipedial Locomotion Up Sandy Slopes: Systematic Experiments Using Zero Moment Point Methods
LOCOMOTION

Bipedial Locomotion Up Sandy Slopes: Systematic Experiments Using Zero Moment Point Methods

Jonathan Gosyne, Christian Hubicki, Xiaobin Xiong, Aaron D. Ames, Daniel I. Goldman

Year
2018
Citations
3

Abstract

Bipedal robotic locomotion in granular media presents a unique set of challenges at the intersection of granular physics and robotic locomotion. In this paper, we perform a systematic experimental study in which biped robotic gaits for traversing a sandy slope are empirically designed using Zero Moment Point (ZMP) methods. We are able to implement gaits that allow our 7 degree-of-freedom planar walking robot to ascend slopes with inclines up to 10°. Firstly, we identify a given set of kinematic parameters that meet the ZMP stability criterion for uphill walking at a given angle. We then find that further relating the step lengths and center of mass heights to specific slope angles through an interpolated fit allows for significantly improved success rates when ascending a sandy slope. Our results provide increased insight into the design, sensitivity and robustness of gaits on granular material, and the kinematic changes necessary for stable locomotion on complex media.

Keywords

Zero moment pointKinematicsRobustness (evolution)Moment (physics)Control theory (sociology)TraverseComputer scienceCentripetal forceRobotIntersection (aeronautics)

Related papers

Browse all LOCOMOTION papers