DocumentCode
110375
Title
A Finite-State Machine for Accommodating Unexpected Large Ground-Height Variations in Bipedal Robot Walking
Author
Hae-Won Park ; Ramezani, Amin ; Grizzle, J.W.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Volume
29
Issue
2
fYear
2013
fDate
Apr-13
Firstpage
331
Lastpage
345
Abstract
This paper presents a feedback controller that allows MABEL, which is a kneed planar bipedal robot with 1-m-long legs, to accommodate terrain that presents large unexpected increases and decreases in height. The robot is provided no information regarding where the change in terrain height occurs and by how much. A finite-state machine is designed that manages transitions among controllers for flat-ground walking, stepping-up and -down, and a trip reflex. If the robot completes a step, the depth of a step-down or the height of a step-up can be immediately estimated at impact from the lengths of the legs and the angles of the robot´s joints. The change in height can be used to invoke a proper control response. On the other hand, if the swing leg impacts an obstacle during a step, or has a premature impact with the ground, a trip reflex is triggered on the basis of specially designed contact switches on the robot´s shins, contact switches at the end of each leg, and the current configuration of the robot. The design of each control mode and the transition conditions among them are presented. This paper concludes with experimental results of MABEL (blindly) accommodating various types of platforms, including ascent of a 12.5-cm-high platform, stepping-off an 18.5-cm-high platform, and walking over a platform with multiple ascending and descending steps.
Keywords
collision avoidance; feedback; finite state machines; humanoid robots; legged locomotion; motion control; robot kinematics; MABEL; contact switches; control response; feedback controller; finite-state machine; flat-ground walking; humanoid robots; kneed planar bipedal robot walking; multiple ascending steps; multiple descending steps; premature impact; robot shins; stepping-down; stepping-up; trip reflex; unexpected large ground-height variations; Computational modeling; Legged locomotion; Mathematical model; Robot sensing systems; Springs; Torso; Humanoid robots; legged locomotion; state machine;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Robotics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1552-3098
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TRO.2012.2230992
Filename
6399609
Link To Document