ROAPP-PHMar 24

Quadrature Oscillation System for Coordinated Motion in Crawling Origami Robot

arXiv:2603.2366622.4h-index: 11
AI Analysis

This enables more complex control for origami robots in extreme environments, though it is incremental as it builds on previous oscillator work.

The paper tackled the limitation of simple autonomous behaviors in electronics-free origami robots by developing a quadrature oscillation system that generates four phase-shifted square-wave signals, enabling coordinated locomotion in a crawling robot.

Origami-inspired robots offer rapid, accessible design and manufacture with diverse functionalities. In particular, origami robots without conventional electronics have the unique advantage of functioning in extreme environments such as ones with high radiation or large magnetic fields. However, the absence of sophisticated control systems limits these robots to simple autonomous behaviors. In our previous studies, we developed a printable, electronics-free, and self-sustained oscillator that generates simple complementary square-wave signals. Our study presents a quadrature oscillation system capable of generating four square-wave signals a quarter-cycle out of phase, enabling four distinct states. Such control signals are important in various engineering and robotics applications, such as orchestrating limb movements in bio-inspired robots. We demonstrate the practicality and value of this oscillation system by designing and constructing an origami crawling robot that utilizes the quadrature oscillator to achieve coordinated locomotion. Together, the oscillator and robot illustrate the potential for more complex control and functions in origami robotics, paving the way for more electronics-free, rapid-design origami robots with advanced autonomous behaviors.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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