Legged locomotion on sand
ORAL
Abstract
To understand how and why animals modulate foot kinematics to achieve effective locomotion on granular media, we study the speed of a six-legged robot with c-shaped legs, SandBot, moving on granular media for varying volume fraction, $\phi$, limb frequency, $f$, and gait timing parameters\footnote{Li et. al, PNAS, \textbf{106}, 3029, 2009}. Speed is determined by step length which in turn depends on limb penetration. At low $f$ and high $\phi$ penetration is small, step length is large, and SandBot advances with a rotary walking gait in which c-legs rotate about their centers by slipping relative to stationary grains. In the opposite extreme, grains cannot support the robot; its underside always contacts the ground and it advances slowly via thrust generated as the c-legs translate through the grains. For varied gait parameters, high speeds are only observed in a small area of parameter space. A yield stress based model predicts the speed and reveals that performance is maximized when gait parameters minimize limb acceleration and interference, and limbs utilize the solidification properties of the media.
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Authors
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Chen Li
School of Physics/Georgia Tech, School of Physics, Georgia Tech, School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology
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Paul Umbanhowar
Northwestern University, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Northwestern University
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Haldun Komsuoglu
Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering, University of Pennsylvania
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Daniel Koditschek
Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering, University of Pennsylvania
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Daniel Goldman
School of Physics/ Georgia Tech, School of Physics, Bioengineering Program, Georgia Tech, School of Physics, Georgia Tech, Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology