ROFeb 24, 2022

Design and Characterization of 3D Printed, Open-Source Actuators for Legged Locomotion

arXiv:2202.12395v113 citationsHas Code
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses the high cost and time barriers in custom actuator development for legged robotics, enabling more accessible co-design of actuators and leg morphology.

The paper presents open-source, 3D-printed quasi-direct-drive actuators for legged robots, costing under $200 each, which showed only a 2% efficiency reduction and 26 mrad backlash growth after 420k strides, with performance comparable to traditional metallic actuators.

Impressive animal locomotion capabilities are mediated by the co-evolution of the skeletal morphology and muscular properties. Legged robot performance would also likely benefit from the co-optimization of actuators and leg morphology. However, development of custom actuators for legged robots is often expensive and time consuming, which discourages roboticists from pursuing performance gains afforded by application-specific actuator optimization. This paper presents open-source designs for two quasi-direct-drive actuators with performance regimes appropriate for an 8--15 kg robot, built completely with off the shelf and 3D-printed components for less than $200 USD each. The mechanical, electrical, and thermal properties of each actuator are characterized and compared to benchmark data. Actuators subjected to 420k strides of gait data experienced only a 2% reduction in efficiency and 26 mrad in backlash growth, demonstrating viability for rigorous and sustained research applications. We present a thermal solution that nearly doubles the thermally-driven torque limits of our plastic actuator design. The performance results are comparable to traditional metallic actuators for use in high-speed legged robots of the same scale. These 3D printed designs demonstrate an approach for designing and characterizing low-cost, highly customizable, and highly reproducible actuators, democratizing the field of actuator design and enabling co-design and optimization of actuators and robot legs.

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