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Controlled Flight of a Biologically Inspired, Insect-Scale Robot

Y. Kevin, Pakpong Chirarattananon, Sawyer B. Fuller, Robert J. Wood

Year
2013
Citations
1,102

Abstract

Flies are among the most agile flying creatures on Earth. To mimic this aerial prowess in a similarly sized robot requires tiny, high-efficiency mechanical components that pose miniaturization challenges governed by force-scaling laws, suggesting unconventional solutions for propulsion, actuation, and manufacturing. To this end, we developed high-power-density piezoelectric flight muscles and a manufacturing methodology capable of rapidly prototyping articulated, flexure-based sub-millimeter mechanisms. We built an 80-milligram, insect-scale, flapping-wing robot modeled loosely on the morphology of flies. Using a modular approach to flight control that relies on limited information about the robot's dynamics, we demonstrated tethered but unconstrained stable hovering and basic controlled flight maneuvers. The result validates a sufficient suite of innovations for achieving artificial, insect-like flight.

Keywords

DragInsect flightRobotProcess (computing)BiomimeticsScale (ratio)Motion (physics)Computer scienceAerospace engineeringSimulation

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