DocumentCode :
1310912
Title :
Flat Dry Elastomer Adhesives as Attachment Materials for Climbing Robots
Author :
Unver, Ozgur ; Sitti, Metin
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Volume :
26
Issue :
1
fYear :
2010
Firstpage :
131
Lastpage :
141
Abstract :
In this paper, flat elastomers are proposed as an attachment material for climbing robots on less than a few micrometer-scale rough surfaces due to their energy-efficient, quiet, and residue-free characteristics. The proper elastomer is chosen by the use of the current adhesion, friction, and peeling elastomer-contact-mechanics models. Then, adhesion and friction properties of the chosen dry flat-elastomer thick films (Vytaflex-10) are characterized on acrylic and smooth and rough glass surfaces for variations in preloads, speeds, contact times, and elastomer thicknesses. A climbing robot with four-bar-based legged-body kinematics is designed and fabricated as simple and lightweight as possible to demonstrate the feasibility of the elastomers as attachment materials on relatively smooth surfaces. The robot utilizes a passive alignment system to make the footpads parallel to the surface on light contact, a peeling mechanism to minimize the detachment vibration, and a passive tail to minimize the pitch-back moment. Experimental results showed that the robot can climb stably on vertical, smooth surfaces in any direction and can walk inverted for a limited amount of time.
Keywords :
adhesion; adhesives; elastomers; friction; legged locomotion; mechanical contact; robot kinematics; vibrations; Vytaflex-10; acrylic glass surface; adhesion model; attachment materials; climbing robots; detachment vibration; dry flat-elastomer thick films; energy-efficient characteristic; flat dry elastomer adhesives; four-bar-based legged-body kinematics; friction model; passive tail; peeling elastomer-contact-mechanics model; peeling mechanism; pitch-back moment; quiet characteristic; residue-free characteristic; rough glass surface; smooth glass surface; Climbing robots; contact mechanics; elastomers; miniature robots;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Robotics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1552-3098
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TRO.2009.2033628
Filename :
5325582
Link To Document :
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