A Tendon-Driven Origami Hopper Triggered by Proprioceptive Contact Detection

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GRASP
Kodlab
origami
compliant mechanism
dynamic robots
tendon-driven
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Engineering
Systems Engineering

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This work is supported in part by the Army Research Office (ARO) under the SLICE Multidisciplinary University Research Initiatives (MURI) Program, award #W911NF1810327 and the National Science Foundation (NSF) grant #1845339. We thank Young-Joo Lee and Yuchong Gao for their insight in material properties, Jeremy Wang and Yifan Yuan for their help in fabrication, and Shane Rozen-Levy for his consulting on soft robotics literature. We also thank Diedra Krieger for her administrative support.

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We report on experiments with a laptop-sized (0.23m, 2.53kg), paper origami robot that exhibits highly dynamic and stable two degree-of-freedom (circular boom) hopping at speeds in excess of 1.5 bl/s (body-lengths per second) at a specific resistance O(1) while achieving aerial phase apex states 25% above the stance height over thousands of cycles. Three conventional brushless DC motors load energy into the folded paper springs through pulley-borne cables whose sudden loss of tension upon touchdown triggers the release of spring potential that accelerates the body back through liftoff to flight with a 20W powerstroke, whereupon the toe angle is adjusted to regulate fore-aft speed. We also demonstrate in the vertical hopping mode the transparency of this actuation scheme by using proprioceptive contact detection with only motor encoder sensing. The combination of actuation and sensing shows potential to lower system complexity for tendon-driven robots. For more information: Kod*lab (link to kodlab.seas.upenn.edu)

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2020-04-06

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Departmental Papers (ESE)

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2023-05-17T23:34:10.000

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