Abstract
Locusts have various motion modes among which they continuously switch in terrestrial and aerial domains, hence achieving high environmental adaptability. Several robots have been developed to mimic the jump-gliding locomotion of locusts, but their mobility and transitional stability are limited because of structural and control limitations at a small scale. In this work, we develop a small-scale locust-inspired robot (LocustBot) that can not only jump and glide but also crawl. We propose a coordinately actuated mechanism that allows LocustBot to perform jump-gliding with few actuators. To achieve the stable and long-distance moving, a reinforcement-learning-based optimized control is used to generate then track the robotâs position and orientation from take-off to landing. The jump-gliding distance of LocustBot reaches 5.39m, revealing a high energy utilization efficiency of the mobile strategy which combines the spring-driven jumping with the propeller-driven gliding. Remarkably, without a high platform, the robot can still achieve a far moving range by continuous crawl-jump-gliding on horizontal planes and thus outperforms the state-of-art jump-gliding robots.
Original language | English |
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Journal | IEEE Transactions on Robotics |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 2024 |
Keywords
- Biologically-inspired robots
- jump-gliding robot
- mechanism design
- motion control