Home /Research /Adaptation of Flipper-Mud Interactions Enables Effective Terrestrial Locomotion on Muddy Substrates
LOCOMOTION

Adaptation of Flipper-Mud Interactions Enables Effective Terrestrial Locomotion on Muddy Substrates

Shipeng Liu, Boyuan Huang, Feifei Qian

Year
2023
Citations
7

Abstract

Moving on natural muddy terrains, where soil composition and water content vary significantly, is complex and challenging. To understand how mud properties and robot-mud interaction strategies affect locomotion performance on mud, we study the terrestrial locomotion of a mudskipper-inspired robot on synthetic mud with precisely-controlled ratios of sand, clay, and water. We observed a non-monotonic dependence of the robot speed on mud water content. Robot speed was the largest on mud with intermediate levels of water content (25%–26%), but decreased significantly on higher or lower water content. Measurements of mud reaction force revealed two distinct failure mechanisms. At high water content, the reduced mud shear strength led to a large slippage of robot appendages and a significantly reduced step length. At low water content, the increased mud suction force caused appendage entrapment, resulting in a large negative displacement in the robot body during the swing phase. A simple model successfully captured the observed robot performance, and informed adaptation strategies that increased robot speed by more than 200%. Our study is a beginning step to extend robot mobility beyond simple substrates towards a wider range of complex, heterogeneous terrains.

Keywords

SlippageRobotTerrainDisplacement (psychology)Water contentAdaptation (eye)GeologyGeotechnical engineeringMaterials scienceEcology

Related papers

Browse all LOCOMOTION papers