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Robotic vertical jumping agility via series-elastic power modulation

Duncan W. Haldane, Mark Plecnik, Justin K. Yim, Ronald S. Fearing

Year
2016
Citations
367

Abstract

), is known to use a power-modulating strategy to obtain higher peak power than that of muscle alone. Few previous robots have used series-elastic power modulation (achieved by combining series-elastic actuation with variable mechanical advantage), and because of motor power limits, the best current robot has a vertical jumping agility of only 55% of a galago. Through use of a specialized leg mechanism designed to enhance power modulation, we constructed a jumping robot that achieved 78% of the vertical jumping agility of a galago. Agile robots can explore venues of locomotion that were not previously attainable. We demonstrate this with a wall jump, where the robot leaps from the floor to a wall and then springs off the wall to reach a net height that is greater than that accessible by a single jump. Our results show that series-elastic power modulation is an actuation strategy that enables a clade of vertically agile robots.

Keywords

JumpingSeries (stratigraphy)Modulation (music)Power (physics)Computer scienceControl theory (sociology)PhysicsArtificial intelligenceGeologyAcoustics

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