ROOct 15, 2020

Dynamic Walking: Toward Agile and Efficient Bipedal Robots

arXiv:2010.07451v110 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of enabling agile and efficient locomotion for bipedal robots, but it is a review article, so it is incremental in summarizing existing literature rather than presenting new research.

The paper reviews methods for achieving dynamic walking on bipedal robots, covering mathematical modeling, optimization-based gait generation, and real-time control, with demonstrations in simulation and experiments showing agile and efficient performance.

Dynamic walking on bipedal robots has evolved from an idea in science fiction to a practical reality. This is due to continued progress in three key areas: a mathematical understanding of locomotion, the computational ability to encode this mathematics through optimization, and the hardware capable of realizing this understanding in practice. In this context, this review article outlines the end-to-end process of methods which have proven effective in the literature for achieving dynamic walking on bipedal robots. We begin by introducing mathematical models of locomotion, from reduced order models that capture essential walking behaviors to hybrid dynamical systems that encode the full order continuous dynamics along with discrete footstrike dynamics. These models form the basis for gait generation via (nonlinear) optimization problems. Finally, models and their generated gaits merge in the context of real-time control, wherein walking behaviors are translated to hardware. The concepts presented are illustrated throughout in simulation, and experimental instantiation on multiple walking platforms are highlighted to demonstrate the ability to realize dynamic walking on bipedal robots that is agile and efficient.

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