Tensegrity structures made from rigid rods and elastic cables have unique characteristics, such as being lightweight, easy to fabricate, and high load-carrying to weight capacity. In this article, we leverage tensegrity structures as wheels for a mobile robot that can actively change its shape by expanding or collapsing the wheels. Besides the shape-changing capability, using tensegrity as wheels offers several advantages over traditional wheels of similar sizes, such as a shock-absorbing capability without added mass since tensegrity wheels are both lightweight and highly compliant. We show that a robot with two icosahedron tensegrity wheels can reduce its width from 400 to 180 mm, and simultaneously, increase its height from 75 to 95 mm by changing the expanded tensegrity wheels to collapsed disk-like ones. The tensegrity wheels enable the robot to overcome steps with heights up to 110 and 150 mm with the expanded and collapsed configuration, respectively. We establish design guidelines for robots with tensegrity wheels by analyzing the maximum step height that can be overcome by the robot and the force required to collapse the wheel. The robot can also jump onto obstacles up to 300-mm high with a bistable mechanism that can gradually store but quickly release energy. We demonstrate the robot's locomotion capability in indoor and outdoor environments, including various natural terrains, like sand, grass, rocks, ice, and snow. Our results suggest that using tensegrity structures as wheels for mobile robots can enhance their capability to overcome obstacles, traverse challenging terrains, and survive falls from heights. When combined with other locomotion modes (e.g., jumping), such shape-changing robots can have broad applications for search-and-rescue after disasters or surveillance and monitoring in unstructured environments.
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Salamanderbot: A soft-rigid composite continuum mobile robot to traverse complex environments
Soft robots are theoretically well-suited to rescue and exploration applications where their flexibility allows for the traversal of highly cluttered environments. However, most existing mobile soft robots are not fast or powerful enough to effectively traverse three dimensional environments. In this paper, we introduce a new mobile robot with a continuously deformable slender body structure, the SalamanderBot, which combines the flexibility and maneuverability of soft robots, with the speed and power of traditional mobile robots. It consists of a cable-driven bellows-like origami module based on the Yoshimura crease pattern mounted between sets of powered wheels. The origami structure allows the body to deform as necessary to adapt to complex environments and terrains, while the wheels allow the robot to reach speeds of up to 303.1 mm/s (2.05 body-length/s). Salamanderbot can climb up to 60-degree slopes and perform sharp turns with a minimum turning radius of 79.9 mm (0.54 body-length).
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- PAR ID:
- 10181579
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- 2020 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA)
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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