DocumentCode
2625701
Title
Locomotion of Miniature Catom Chains: Scale Effects on Gait and Velocity
Author
Christensen, David Johan ; Campbell, Jason
Author_Institution
Maersk Mc-Kinney Moller Inst., Southern Denmark Univ., Odense
fYear
2007
fDate
10-14 April 2007
Firstpage
2254
Lastpage
2260
Abstract
Scaling down the module size of a self-reconfigurable robot will have a profound effect on the module\´s characteristics, e.g. strength to mass ratio. In this paper we explore how the characteristics of chains of modules, specifically locomotion velocity and best gait type, might change with the scale of those modules. The simulated experiments we report on here examine module sizes from (11 mum to 698 mum radius) and chain lengths from 3 to 30 modules. All gaits tested were based on central pattern generators optimized using a genetic algorithm and hill climbing. Our results show that scaling affects both the preferred type of gait as well as a chain\´s overall performance (average velocity). In summary, there is a tradeoff where larger scales face the challenge of overcoming gravity, while smaller sizes face the challenge of staying in contact with the ground and the friction it provides. We show that in between these two extremes lies a "best" module size for given environmental, physical, and engineering constraints
Keywords
interconnected systems; microrobots; mobile robots; motion control; self-adjusting systems; genetic algorithm; hill climbing; locomotion velocity; miniature atom chain locomotion; pattern generator; self-reconfigurable robot; Biological systems; Friction; Genetic algorithms; Gravity; Robotic assembly; Robotics and automation; Robots; Test pattern generators; Testing; Torque;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation, 2007 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Roma
ISSN
1050-4729
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0601-3
Electronic_ISBN
1050-4729
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ROBOT.2007.363655
Filename
4209419
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