Publication | Closed Access
Hybrid magnetic mechanism for active locomotion based on inchworm motion
23
Citations
15
References
2012
Year
EngineeringBioroboticsMechanical EngineeringField RoboticsMotor ControlLocomotion (Cellular Biology)Biomedical EngineeringMicroactuatorHybrid Magnetic MechanismKinesiologyBiomechanicsBio-inspired RoboticsLegged RobotKinematicsRobot MechanismHealth SciencesMechatronicsBiomimetic ActuatorMagnetic RobotsLocomotion (Animal Biomechanics)Magnetic TorqueBipedal LocomotionMechanical SystemsRobotics
Magnetic robots have been studied in the past. Insect-type micro-robots are used in various biomedical applications; researchers have developed inchworm micro-robots for endoscopic use. A biological inchworm has a looping locomotion gait. However, most inchworm micro-robots depend on a general bending, or bellows, motion. In this paper, we introduce a new robotic mechanism using magnetic force and torque control in a rotating magnetic field for a looping gait. The proposed robot is controlled by the magnetic torque, attractive force, and body mechanisms (two stoppers, flexible body, and different frictional legs). The magnetic torque generates a general bending motion. In addition, the attractive force and body mechanisms produce the robot?s looping motion within a rotating magnetic field and without the use of an algorithm for field control. We verified the device?s performance and analyzed the motion through simulations and various experiments. The robot mechanism can be applied to active locomotion for various medical robots, such as wireless endoscopes.
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