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Design of a Multi-Directional Variable Stiffness Leg for Dynamic Running
Author(s) -
Kevin C. Galloway,
Jonathan E. Clark,
Daniel E. Koditschek
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
scholarlycommons (university of pennsylvania)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1115/imece2007-41318
Subject(s) - computer science , adaptability , variable (mathematics) , stiffness , gait , terrain , robot , mechanism (biology) , control theory (sociology) , range (aeronautics) , simulation , control engineering , engineering , artificial intelligence , control (management) , structural engineering , mathematics , mathematical analysis , ecology , philosophy , epistemology , biology , physiology , aerospace engineering
Recent developments in dynamic legged locomotion have focused on encoding a substantial component of leg intelligence into passive compliant mechanisms. One of the limitations of this approach is reduced adaptability: the final leg mechanism usually performs optimally for a small range of conditions (i.e. a certain robot weight, terrain, speed, gait, and so forth). For many situations in which a small locomotion system experiences a change in any of these conditions, it is desirable to have a variable stiffness leg to tune the natural frequency of the system for effective gait control. In this paper, we present an overview of variable stiffness leg spring designs, and introduce a new approach specifically for autonomous dynamic legged locomotion. We introduce a simple leg model that captures the spatial compliance of the tunable leg in three dimensions. Lastly, we present the design and manufacture of the multi-directional variable stiffness legs, and experimentally validate their correspondence to the proposed model.Copyright © 2007 by ASME

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