Locomotion of an Elastic Snake Robot via Natural Dynamics
Tristan Ehlert, Arne Sachtler, Annika Schmidt, Davide Calzolari, Alin Albu-Schäffer
TLDR
This paper explores using nonlinear natural dynamics for efficient locomotion in elastic snake robots, finding non-brake orbit gaits improve efficiency.
Key contributions
- Investigates how nonlinear natural dynamics can be used to design efficient gaits for elastic snake robots.
- Presents two gait types: switching between nonlinear normal modes and non-brake periodic trajectories (orbits).
- Demonstrates non-brake orbit gaits are perfectly efficient in energy-conservative simulations.
- Shows non-brake orbit gaits achieve higher efficiency than baseline rigid systems in simulations with friction.
Why it matters
This research offers promising insights into designing highly efficient gaits for elastic snake robots by leveraging their natural, nonlinear dynamics. It suggests that exploiting inherent system properties can lead to significant energy savings compared to traditional rigid approaches, fostering future work in bio-inspired robotics.
Original Abstract
Nature suggests that exploiting the elasticities and natural dynamics of robotic systems could increase their locomotion efficiency. Prior work on elastic snake robots supports this hypothesis, but has not fully exploited the nonlinear dynamic behavior of the systems. Recent advances in eigenmanifold theory enable a better characterization of the natural dynamics in complex nonlinear systems. This letter investigates if and how the nonlinear natural dynamics of a kinematic elastic snake robot can be used to design efficient gaits. Two types of gaits based on natural dynamics are presented and compared to a state-of-the-art approach using dynamics simulations. The results reveal that a gait generated by switching between two nonlinear normal modes does not improve the locomotion efficiency of the robot. In contrast, gaits based on non-brake periodic trajectories (non-brake orbits) are perfectly efficient in the energy-conservative case. Further simulations with friction reveal that, in a more realistic scenario, non-brake orbit gaits achieve higher efficiency compared to the baseline gait on the rigid system. Overall, the investigation offers promising insights into the design of gaits based on natural dynamics, fostering further research.
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