Unifying Sidewinding and Rolling: A Wave-Based Framework for Self-Righting in Elongated Limbless and Multi-Legged Robots
This research provides design guidelines for centipede-like robots operating in uncertain terrain, addressing the problem of reliable self-righting for elongated, multi-legged systems, which is an incremental contribution to robotics.
This study investigates self-righting strategies for elongated limbless and multi-legged robots, comparing biological exemplars (Scolopendra subspinipes and Scutigera coleoptrata) and developing an elongate robot with adjustable leg lengths. It found that increasing leg length necessitates a shift in control strategy to prevent torque over-concentration and identified a critical limb-length threshold beyond which robust self-righting becomes challenging.
Centipede-like robots offer unique locomotion advantages due to their small cross-sectional area for accessing confined spaces, and their redundant legs enhance robustness in cluttered environments such as search-and-rescue and pipe inspection. However, elongated robots are particularly vulnerable to tipping over when climbing large obstacles, making reliable self-righting essential for field deployment. Self-righting strategies for elongate, multi-legged systems remain poorly understood. In this study, we conduct a comparative biomechanics and robophysical investigation to address three key questions: (1) What self-righting strategies are effective for elongate, many-legged systems? (2) How should these strategies depend on morphological parameters such as leg length and leg number? (3) Is there a morphological limit beyond which reliable self-righting becomes infeasible? We compare two biological exemplars: Scolopendra subspinipes (short legs) and Scutigera coleoptrata (house centipedes with long legs). Scolopendra subspinipes reliably self-rights both during aerial phases and through ground-assisted self-righting, whereas house centipedes rely predominantly on aerial reorientation and struggle to generate effective self-righting torques during ground contact. Motivated by these observations, we construct a parameterized space of bio-inspired self-righting strategies and develop an elongate robot with adjustable leg lengths. Systematic experiments reveal that increasing leg length necessitates a shift in control strategy to prevent torque over-concentration in mid-body actuators, and we identify a critical limb-length threshold above which robust self-righting becomes challenging. These results establish morphology-strategy coupling principles for self-righting in elongate robots and provide design guidelines for centipede-like systems operating in uncertain terrain.