“As the crow flies” is a common idiom referring to the shortest distance between two points, but the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS), led by Dario Floreano, in EPFL’s School of Engineering has taken the phrase literally with RAVEN (Robotic Avian-inspired Vehicle for multiple ENvironments). Designed based on perching birds like ravens and crows that frequently switch between air and land, the multifunctional robotic legs allow it to take off autonomously in environments previously inaccessible to winged drones.
“Birds were the inspiration
for airplanes in the first place, and the Wright brothers made this dream come
true, but even today’s planes are still quite far from what birds are capable
of,” says LIS PhD student Won Dong Shin. “Birds can transition from walking to
running to the air and back again, without the aid of a runway or launcher.
Engineering platforms for these kinds of movements are still missing in
robotics.”
RAVEN’s design is aimed at maximizing
gait diversity while minimizing mass. Inspired by the proportions of bird legs
(and lengthy observations of crows on EPFL’s campus), Shin designed a set of
custom, multifunctional avian legs for a fixed-wing drone. He used a
combination of mathematical models, computer simulations, and experimental
iterations to achieve an optimal balance between leg complexity and overall
drone weight (0.62kg). The resulting leg keeps heavier components close to the
‘body’, while a combination of springs and motors mimics powerful avian tendons
and muscles. Lightweight avian-inspired feet composed of two articulated
structures leverage a passive elastic joint that supports diverse postures for
walking, hopping, and jumping.
“Translating avian legs and feet into a
lightweight robotic system presented us with design, integration, and control
problems that birds have solved elegantly over the course of evolution,”
Floreano says. “This led us to not only come up with the most multimodal winged
drone to date, but also to shed light on the energetic efficiency of jumping
for take-off in both birds and drones.” The research has been published in Nature.
Better
access for deliveries or disaster relief
Previous robots designed to walk have
been too heavy to jump, while robots designed to jump did not have feet
suitable for walking. RAVEN’s unique design allows it to walk, traverse gaps in
terrain, and even to jump up onto an elevated surface 26 centimeters high. The
scientists also experimented with different modes of flight initiation,
including standing and falling take-off, and they found that jumping into
flight made the most efficient use of kinetic energy (speed) and potential
energy (height gain). The LIS researchers teamed up with Auke Ijspeert of
EPFL’s BioRobotics Lab, and with Monica Daley’s Neuromechanics Lab at University of California, Irvine, to adapt
bird biomechanics to robotic locomotion.
These results represent just a first step towards a better understanding
of design and control principles of multi-modal flying animals, and their
translation into agile and energetically efficient drones.Prof. Dario Floreano,
head, Laboratory of Intelligent Systems
In addition to elucidating the costs and
benefits of powerful legs in birds that frequently transition between air and
ground, the results offer a lightweight design for winged drones that can move
on rough terrain and take off from restricted locations without human
intervention. These capabilities enable the use of such drones in inspection,
disaster mitigation, and delivery in confined areas. The EPFL team is already
working on improved design and control of the legs to facilitate landing in a
variety of environments.
“Avian wings are the equivalent of front
legs in terrestrial quadrupeds, but little is known about the coordination of
legs and wings in birds – not to mention drones. These results represent just a
first step towards a better understanding of design and control principles of
multimodal flying animals, and their translation into agile and energetically
efficient drones,” Floreano says.
Source: https://actu.epfl.ch/news/bird-inspired-drone-can-jump-for-take-off/
Source: Bird-inspired drone can jump for take-off – Scents of Science
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