Charles Xiao

2papers

2 Papers

ROMar 25, 2021
Thermodynamically-informed Air-based Soft Heat Engine Design

Charles Xiao, Luke F. Gockowski, Bolin Liao et al.

Soft heat engines are poised to play a vital role in future soft robots due to their easy integration into soft structures and low-voltage power requirements. Recent works have demonstrated soft heat engines relying on liquid-to-gas phase change materials. However, despite the fact that many soft robots have air as a primary component, soft air cycles are not a focus of the field. In this paper, we develop theory for air-based soft heat engines design and efficiency, and demonstrate experimentally that efficiency can be improved through careful cycle design. We compare a simple constant-load cycle to a designed decreasing-load cycle, inspired by the Otto cycle. While both efficiencies are relatively low, the Otto-like cycle improves efficiency by a factor of 11.3, demonstrating the promise of this approach. Our results lay the foundation for the development of air-based soft heat engines as a new option for powering soft robots.

ROApr 7, 2020
Field-mediated locomotor dynamics on highly deformable surfaces

Shengkai Li, Yasemin Ozkan Aydin, Charles Xiao et al.

In many systems motion occurs on deformed and deformable surfaces, setting up the possibility for dynamical interactions solely mediated by the coupling of the entities with their environment. Here we study the "two-body" dynamics of robot locomotion on a highly deformable spandex membrane in two scenarios: one in which a robot orbits a large central depression and the other where the two robots affect each other's motion solely through mutual environmental deformations. Inspired by the resemblance of the orbits of the single robot with those of general relativistic orbits around black holes, we recast the vehicle plus membrane dynamics in physical space into the geodesic motion of a "test particle" in a fiducial curved space-time and demonstrate how this framework facilitates understanding the observed dynamics. The two-robot problem also exhibits a resemblance with Einstein's general relativistic view of gravity, which in the words of Wheeler: "spacetime tells matter how to move; matter tells spacetime how to curve." We generalize this case the mapping to include a reciprocal coupling that translates into robotic curvature-based control schemes which modify interaction (promoting avoidance or aggregation) without long-range sensing. Our work provides a starting point for developing a mechanical analog gravity system as well as develops a framework that can provide insights into active matter in deformable environments and robot exploration in complex landscapes.