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Low-bandwidth reflex-based control for lower power walking: 65 km on a single battery charge
187
Citations
46
References
2014
Year
Lower Power WalkingGait AnalysisNeuromuscular CoordinationEngineeringMotor ControlMovement AnalysisRehabilitation RoboticsKinesiologySystems EngineeringLegged RobotKinematicsHuman MotionPhysical MedicineHealth SciencesFlat GroundSingle Battery ChargeRehabilitationSimple RobotWalking RobotsBipedal LocomotionMotion ControlExercise PhysiologyHuman MovementMotor DissipationRoboticsLow-bandwidth Reflex-based Control
Legged robots have not yet matched human walking in reliability or low power, even on flat terrain. This work introduces a simple robot that moves toward achieving human‑like walking reliability and energy efficiency. Ranger is a knee‑less, four‑legged bipedal robot that operates autonomously with.
No legged walking robot yet approaches the high reliability and the low power usage of a walking person, even on flat ground. Here we describe a simple robot which makes small progress towards that goal. Ranger is a knee-less four-legged ‘bipedal’ robot which is energetically and computationally autonomous, except for radio controlled steering. Ranger walked 65.2 km in 186,076 steps in about 31 h without being touched by a human with a total cost of transport [TCOT ≡ P/mgv ] of 0.28, similar to human’s TCOT of ≈ 0.3. The high reliability and low energy use were achieved by: (a) development of an accurate bench-test-based simulation; (b) development of an intuitively tuned nominal trajectory based on simple locomotion models; and (c) offline design of a simple reflex-based (that is, event-driven discrete feed-forward) stabilizing controller. Further, once we replaced the intuitively tuned nominal trajectory with a trajectory found from numerical optimization, but still using event-based control, we could further reduce the TCOT to 0.19. At TCOT = 0.19, the robot’s total power of 11.5 W is used by sensors, processors and communications (45%), motor dissipation (≈34%) and positive mechanical work (≈21%). Ranger’s reliability and low energy use suggests that simplified implementation of offline trajectory optimization, stabilized by a low-bandwidth reflex-based controller, might lead to the energy-effective reliable walking of more complex robots.
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