导线
地形
机器人
Lift(数据挖掘)
流离失所(心理学)
海洋工程
地质学
工程类
模拟
岩土工程
计算机科学
人工智能
大地测量学
生态学
生物
心理治疗师
数据挖掘
心理学
作者
Nicole M Graf,Alexander M. Behr,Kathryn A. Daltorio
标识
DOI:10.1088/1748-3190/abdd94
摘要
Sandy beaches are areas that challenge robots of all sizes, especially smaller scale robots. Sand can hinder locomotion and waves apply hydrodynamic forces which can displace, reorient, or even invert the robot. Crab-like legs and gaits are well suited for this environment and could be used as inspiration for an improved design of robots operating in this terrain. Tapered, curved feet (similar to crab dactyl shape) paired with a distributed inward gripping method are hypothesized to enable better anchoring in sand to resist hydrodynamic forces. This work demonstrates that crab-like legs can withstand vertical forces that are larger than the body weight (e.g. in submerged sand, the force required to lift the robot can be up to 138% of the robot weight). Such legs help the robot hold its place against hydrodynamic forces imparted by waves (e.g. compared to displacement of 42.7 mm with the original feet, crab-like feet reduced displacement to 1.6 mm in lab wave tests). These feet are compatible with walking on sandy and rocky terrain (tested at three speeds: slow, medium, and fast), albeit at reduced speeds from traditional feet. This work shows potential for future robots to utilize tapered and curved feet to traverse challenging surf zone terrain where biological crabs thrive.
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