Sensitive dependence of the motion of a legged robot on granular media
- aSchool of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332;
- bDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208; and
- cDepartment of Electrical and Systems Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104
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Edited by Harry L. Swinney, University of Texas, Austin, TX, and approved December 29, 2008 (received for review September 12, 2008)
Abstract
Legged locomotion on flowing ground (e.g., granular media) is unlike locomotion on hard ground because feet experience both solid- and fluid-like forces during surface penetration. Recent bioinspired legged robots display speed relative to body size on hard ground comparable with high-performing organisms like cockroaches but suffer significant performance loss on flowing materials like sand. In laboratory experiments, we study the performance (speed) of a small (2.3 kg) 6-legged robot, SandBot, as it runs on a bed of granular media (1-mm poppy seeds). For an alternating tripod gait on the granular bed, standard gait control parameters achieve speeds at best 2 orders of magnitude smaller than the 2 body lengths/s (≈60 cm/s) for motion on hard ground. However, empirical adjustment of these control parameters away from the hard ground settings restores good performance, yielding top speeds of 30 cm/s. Robot speed depends sensitively on the packing fraction φ and the limb frequency ω, and a dramatic transition from rotary walking to slow swimming occurs when φ becomes small enough and/or ω large enough. We propose a kinematic model of the rotary walking mode based on generic features of penetration and slip of a curved limb in granular media. The model captures the dependence of robot speed on limb frequency and the transition between walking and swimming modes but highlights the need for a deeper understanding of the physics of granular media.
Footnotes
- 1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: daniel.goldman{at}physics.gatech.edu
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Author contributions: C.L., P.B.U., H.K., and D.I.G. designed research; C.L. performed research; C.L., P.B.U., and D.I.G. analyzed data; and C.L., P.B.U., D.E.K., and D.I.G. wrote the paper.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
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Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.
- © 2009 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA










