Paper
9 June 1999 Elastodynamic analysis and design of an inchworm robotic insect
Nicolae O. Lobontiu, Michael Goldfarb, Ephrahim Garcia
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The paper presents an inchworm robotic insect that is capable of motion over smooth terrain. The structure is lightly-damped and consists of a unimorph piezoelectric actuator (THUNDER) that acts as both structural member and source of motion and two custom-designed limbs that are attached to the body by means of adjustable clamps. The limbs can either roll or drag on the ground when an appropriate resonance is excited. The approach is called elastodynamic locomotion. A cycle of this `falling-ahead' unidirectional motion is composed of two segments: a shorter one when the front leg is rolling on the ground surface and transports the structure ahead while the rear leg drags on the ground, and a longer one, when the legs interchange their functions. The mathematical model assumes the legs are compliant. The geometry of deformation was utilized to find a configuration that is capable of maximizing the horizontal displacement of the robot. An actual inchworm design produced a motion that confirmed the theoretical predictions. A lumped-parameter dynamic model was formulated that allowed evaluation of the ground reaction forces and the velocity of the robot by using data of the geometric model and solving the inverse dynamics problem.
© (1999) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Nicolae O. Lobontiu, Michael Goldfarb, and Ephrahim Garcia "Elastodynamic analysis and design of an inchworm robotic insect", Proc. SPIE 3668, Smart Structures and Materials 1999: Smart Structures and Integrated Systems, (9 June 1999); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.350748
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Motion models

Actuators

Mathematical modeling

Data modeling

Robotics

Motion analysis

Numerical simulations

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