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Main Authors: Askari, Mohammad, Shin, Won Dong, Lenherr, Damian, Stewart, William, Floreano, Dario
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2303.17057
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author Askari, Mohammad
Shin, Won Dong
Lenherr, Damian
Stewart, William
Floreano, Dario
author_facet Askari, Mohammad
Shin, Won Dong
Lenherr, Damian
Stewart, William
Floreano, Dario
contents Multimodal UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) are rarely capable of more than two modalities, i.e., flying and walking or flying and perching. However, being able to fly, perch, and walk could further improve their usefulness by expanding their operating envelope. For instance, an aerial robot could fly a long distance, perch in a high place to survey the surroundings, then walk to avoid obstacles that could potentially inhibit flight. Birds are capable of these three tasks, and so offer a practical example of how a robot might be developed to do the same. In this paper, we present a specialized avian-inspired claw design to enable UAVs to perch passively or walk. The key innovation is the combination of a Hoberman linkage leg with Fin Ray claw that uses the weight of the UAV to wrap the claw around a perch, or hyperextend it in the opposite direction to form a curved-up shape for stable terrestrial locomotion. Because the design uses the weight of the vehicle, the underactuated design is lightweight and low power. With the inclusion of talons, the 45g claws are capable of holding a 700g UAV to an almost 20-degree angle on a perch. In scenarios where cluttered environments impede flight and long mission times are required, such a combination of flying, perching, and walking is critical.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2303_17057
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Avian-Inspired Claws Enable Robot Perching or Walking
Askari, Mohammad
Shin, Won Dong
Lenherr, Damian
Stewart, William
Floreano, Dario
Robotics
Multimodal UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) are rarely capable of more than two modalities, i.e., flying and walking or flying and perching. However, being able to fly, perch, and walk could further improve their usefulness by expanding their operating envelope. For instance, an aerial robot could fly a long distance, perch in a high place to survey the surroundings, then walk to avoid obstacles that could potentially inhibit flight. Birds are capable of these three tasks, and so offer a practical example of how a robot might be developed to do the same. In this paper, we present a specialized avian-inspired claw design to enable UAVs to perch passively or walk. The key innovation is the combination of a Hoberman linkage leg with Fin Ray claw that uses the weight of the UAV to wrap the claw around a perch, or hyperextend it in the opposite direction to form a curved-up shape for stable terrestrial locomotion. Because the design uses the weight of the vehicle, the underactuated design is lightweight and low power. With the inclusion of talons, the 45g claws are capable of holding a 700g UAV to an almost 20-degree angle on a perch. In scenarios where cluttered environments impede flight and long mission times are required, such a combination of flying, perching, and walking is critical.
title Avian-Inspired Claws Enable Robot Perching or Walking
topic Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2303.17057