Walking machines

1986 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 75
Author(s):  
A.A. Collie
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Sivakumar Dhandapani ◽  
Madara M. Ogot

Abstract A key consideration in the design of walking machines is the minimization of energy consumption. Two main avenues of research have been pursued in the past (a) finding an optimal gait which reduces energy consumption or (b) the employment of energy storage devices to recover energy from one step to the next. This study follows the latter approach, which has hitherto concentrated on hopping machines. Several practical design considerations for energy recovery in multi-legged walking machines, where a stance phase prevents the immediate recovery of energy from one step to the next, are investigated. Two schemes, passive and active locking, are introduced. The simplified models presented serve to illustrate the feasibility of these schemes.


2012 ◽  
pp. 789-796
Author(s):  
KRZYSZTOF KOZŁOWSKI ◽  
MATEUSZ MICHALSKI ◽  
PAWEŁ PARULSKI

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiaojiao Wang ◽  
Junehu Park ◽  
Xiaotian Zhang ◽  
Insu Park ◽  
Evin Kilicarslan ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe intriguing opportunities enabled by the use of living components in biological machines have spurred the development of a variety of muscle-powered bio-hybrid robots in recent years. Among them, several generations of bio-hybrid walkers have been established as reliable platforms to study untethered locomotion. However, despite these advances, such technology is not mature yet, and major challenges remain. This study takes steps to address two of them: the lack of systematic design approaches, common to bio-hybrid robotics in general, and in the case of bio-hybrid walkers specifically, the lack of maneuverability. We then present here a dual-ring biobot, computationally designed and selected to exhibit robust forward motion and rotational steering. This dual-ring biobot consists of two independent muscle actuators and a 4-legged scaffold asymmetric in the fore/aft direction. The integration of multiple muscles within its body architecture, combined with differential electrical stimulation, allows the robot to maneuver. The dual-ring robot design is then fabricated and experimentally tested, confirming computational predictions and turning abilities. Overall, our design approach based on modeling, simulation, and fabrication exemplified in this robot represents a route to efficiently engineer biological machines with adaptive functionalities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 234-240
Author(s):  
Vadim Chernyshev ◽  
Vladimir Arykantsev ◽  
Anton Goncharov ◽  
Nikolay Sharonov

For mobile robots designed to work in extreme conditions, an important characteristic is the value of the overcoming slope. For wheeled and tracked vehicles, the angle of the overcoming slope is limited by the adhesion properties of the soil. The walking device can provide overcoming of higher slopes, since the analogue of the adhesion coefficient for walking machines, with a large footprint track depth, can be significantly greater than 1. The paper discusses the results of experimental studies of the features of overcoming slopes by a walking device in weak soil conditions. When mobile robots overcoming inclines, they may overturn or slide downhill. It is shown that on soft soils the sliding of walking machines downhill is unlikely because of significant deformations of the soil under the support elements. On the other hand, the deformation of the soil worsens the resistance of the walking vehicle to overturning. A method of increasing resistance to overturning by controlling the position of the robot body by separately regulating the conditional clearance of walking mechanisms is considered. The possibility of adjusting the clearance in the propulsion unit on the basis of Umnov-Chebyshev cyclic walking mechanisms is shown. Climbing slopes requires a certain amount of traction. The values of the additional power and the force characteristics of the walking device’s drive necessary for successful overcoming of slopes have been determined. The results of the work can be demand in the development of walking machines and mobile robots. Key words Mobile robots, walking machines, interaction with the ground, traction and coupling properties, overcoming slopes, tipping resistance, mathematical modeling, field tests. Acknowledgements Research was partially supported by RFBR and the Administration of the Volgograd region, research projects no. 19-08-01180 a, 19-48-340007 p_a.


Romansy 14 ◽  
2002 ◽  
pp. 463-470 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Gruber ◽  
Werner Schiehlen

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