首页 /研究 /Bio-inspired mechanisms for inclined locomotion in a legged insect-scale robot
LOCOMOTION

Bio-inspired mechanisms for inclined locomotion in a legged insect-scale robot

Benedikt F. Seitz, Benjamin Goldberg, Neel Doshi, Onur Özcan, David L. Christensen, Elliot W. Hawkes, Mark R. Cutkosky, Robert J. Wood

发表年份
2014
引用次数
36

摘要

Legged locomotion is an open problem in robotics, particularly for non-level surfaces. With decreasing robot size, different issues for climbing mechanisms and their attachment and detachment appear due to the physics of scaling. This paper describes micro-scale phenomena for different adhesion methods that can be employed in microrobots. These adhesion methods are applied to a sub-2 gram legged robot, the Harvard Ambulatory MicroRobot (HAMR), by leveraging recent advances in milli- and micrometer-scale manufacturing. The presented designs utilize different passively oriented adhesives on the legs of the robot to improve inclined locomotion performance. A 3DoF ankle joint is designed and implemented and the effects of a passive tail are studied. As a result, HAMR's climbing capability is increased from 3° inclines to 22° inclines and 45° declines. Finally, an analytical model of leg and foot force generation is presented and compared with experimental force data from the attachment mechanism on a single-leg experimental setup.

关键词

RobotClimbingLegged robotRobot locomotionMechanism (biology)Computer scienceRoboticsSimulationScale (ratio)Humanoid robot

相关论文

查看 LOCOMOTION 分类全部论文