2017 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS) 2017
DOI: 10.1109/iros.2017.8206380
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Inclined surface locomotion strategies for spherical tensegrity robots

Abstract: This paper presents a new teleoperated spherical tensegrity robot capable of performing locomotion on steep inclined surfaces. With a novel control scheme centered around the simultaneous actuation of multiple cables, the robot demonstrates robust climbing on inclined surfaces in hardware experiments and speeds significantly faster than previous spherical tensegrity models. This robot is an improvement over other iterations in the TT-series and the first tensegrity to achieve reliable locomotion on inclined su… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
(26 reference statements)
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“…Recent work has, for instance, explored hand-picked strategies for the quasi-static locomotion of a cable-actuated tensegrity on inclined surfaces. 61 Our own ability to harness tensegrity vibration to induce large-scale and dynamic structure offers a compelling and promising method of discovering much more dynamic gaits for these environments. Indeed, our robot design is already capable of interesting behavioral diversity, including several unique rolling behaviors, which might be beneficial across environments—however, we were unable to explore these more deeply due to the tethered nature of this design.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work has, for instance, explored hand-picked strategies for the quasi-static locomotion of a cable-actuated tensegrity on inclined surfaces. 61 Our own ability to harness tensegrity vibration to induce large-scale and dynamic structure offers a compelling and promising method of discovering much more dynamic gaits for these environments. Indeed, our robot design is already capable of interesting behavioral diversity, including several unique rolling behaviors, which might be beneficial across environments—however, we were unable to explore these more deeply due to the tethered nature of this design.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, the methods can be used to estimate the maximum ground inclination the robots can manage or to compute actuation policies to overcome a certain inclination, which is an ongoing research topic in the field. 58…”
Section: Rolling Locomotion Of Spherical Tensegrity Robotsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Physically accurate simulation of the motion requires significant computational effort for propagation of a detailed dynamical model. For this reason, most of the past work has used simpler models to reason about the static stability of the vehicle and determine shape changes that result in gravity-induced locomotion (Caluwaerts et al, 2014; Chen et al, 2017; Kim et al, 2015).…”
Section: Kinematic Computations For Primitivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These benefits have motivated ongoing work on the design, simulation, and hardware prototyping of tensegrity robots (Caluwaerts et al, 2014;Skelton and de Oliveira, 2009). Multiple behaviors have already been demonstrated: crawling (Mirletz et al, 2015a;Paul et al, 2006), swimming (Bliss et al, 2013), rolling locomotion (Iscen et al, 2014;Kim et al, 2015), ascending inclines (Chen et al, 2017), and deployment as compliant many-degree-of-freedom (many-DoF) joints, as in Figure 1(b). Example uses include search and rescue in disaster areas, the exploration of natural environments, exploration and cleaning of pipes and ducts (Friesen et al, 2014), and space-related applications (Furuya, 1992).…”
Section: Tensegrity Roboticsmentioning
confidence: 99%