Mark W. Spong

2papers

2 Papers

13.4SYApr 1
The QuadSoft: Design, Construction, and Experimental Validation of a Soft and Actuated Quadrotor

Rodolfo Verdin, Hugo Moreno, Mark W. Spong et al.

This paper presents QuadSoft, a novel fully actuated quadrotor equipped with continuous-curvature, tendon-driven soft robotic arms. The design combines a semi-rigid central frame with flexible arms, enabling controlled structural reconfiguration during flight without altering the propeller layout. Unlike existing soft aerial platforms that rely on discrete bending joints, QuadSoft utilizes a continuum deformation approach to modulate arm curvature, actively adjusting its thrust vector and aerodynamic characteristics. We characterize the geometric mapping between servomotor input and the resulting constant curvature, validating it experimentally. Outdoor flight tests demonstrate stable take-off, hover, directional maneuvers, and landing, confirming that controlled arm bending can generate horizontal displacement while preserving altitude. Measurements of pitch, roll, and curvature angles show that the platform follows intended actuation patterns with minimal attitude deviations. These results demonstrate that QuadSoft preserves the baseline stability of rigid quadrotors while enabling morphology-driven maneuverability, all under the standard PX4 autopilot without retuning. Beyond a proof of concept, this work establishes a distinctive outdoor validation of a tendon-driven continuum morphing quadrotor, opening a new research avenue toward adaptive aerial systems that combine the safety and versatility of soft robotics with the performance of conventional UAVs.

SYApr 29, 2021
Integral Line-of-Sight Path Following Control of Magnetic Helical Microswimmers Subject to Step-Out Frequencies

Alireza Mohammadi, Mark W. Spong

This paper investigates the problem of straight-line path following for magnetic helical microswimmers. The control objective is to make the helical microswimmer to converge to a straight line without violating the step-out frequency constraint. The proposed feedback control solution is based on an optimal decision strategy (ODS) that is cast as a trust-region subproblem (TRS), i.e., a quadratic program over a sphere. The ODS-based control strategy minimizes the difference between the microrobot velocity and an integral line-of-sight (ILOS)-based reference vector field while respecting the magnetic saturation constraints and ensuring the absolute continuity of the control input. Due to the embedded integral action in the reference vector field, the microswimmer will follow the desired straight line by compensating for the drift effect of the environmental disturbances as well as the microswimmer weight.