BIO-PHROSYQMMar 17, 2021

Mechanical principles of dynamic terrestrial self-righting using wings

arXiv:2103.09450v226 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses self-righting challenges for small terrestrial robots, offering an incremental improvement by adapting biological principles for novel robotic applications.

The study tackled the problem of small robots flipping over in complex terrains by designing a robot inspired by winged cockroaches to self-right using wings, discovering that larger, faster symmetric wing opening improves performance and asymmetric opening helps with small openings, with results suggesting dynamic maneuvers save energy compared to static shells.

Terrestrial animals and robots are susceptible to flipping-over during rapid locomotion in complex terrains. However, small robots are less capable of self-righting from an upside-down orientation compared to small animals like insects. Inspired by the winged discoid cockroach, we designed a new robot that opens its wings to self-right by pushing against the ground. We used this robot to systematically test how self-righting performance depends on wing opening magnitude, speed, and asymmetry, and modeled how kinematic and energetic requirements depend on wing shape and body/wing mass distribution. We discovered that the robot self-rights dynamically using kinetic energy to overcome potential energy barriers, that larger and faster symmetric wing opening increases self-righting performance, and that opening wings asymmetrically increases righting probability when wing opening is small. Our results suggested that the discoid cockroach's winged self-righting is a dynamic maneuver. While the thin, lightweight wings of the discoid cockroach and our robot are energetically sub-optimal for self-righting compared to tall, heavy ones, their ability to open wings saves them substantial energy compared to if they had static shells. Analogous to biological exaptations, our study provided a proof-of-concept for terrestrial robots to use existing morphology in novel ways to overcome new locomotor challenges.

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