Home /Research /The kinematics of hyper-redundant robot locomotion
MANIPULATION

The kinematics of hyper-redundant robot locomotion

Gregory S. Chirikjian, Joel W. Burdick

Year
1995
Citations
398

Abstract

This paper considers the kinematics of hyper-redundant (or "serpentine") robot locomotion over uneven solid terrain, and presents algorithms to implement a variety of "gaits". The analysis and algorithms are based on a continuous backbone curve model which captures the robot's macroscopic geometry. Two classes of gaits, based on stationary waves and traveling waves of mechanism deformation, are introduced for hyper-redundant robots of both constant and variable length. We also illustrate how the locomotion algorithms can be used to plan the manipulation of objects which are grasped in a tentacle-like manner. Several of these gaits and the manipulation algorithm have been implemented on a 30 degree-of-freedom hyper-redundant robot. Experimental results are presented to demonstrate and validate these concepts and our modeling assumptions.

Keywords

KinematicsRobotTerrainComputer scienceRobot kinematicsInverse kinematicsMechanism (biology)Robot locomotionControl theory (sociology)Artificial intelligence

Related papers

Browse all MANIPULATION papers