4.6 Article

Pace Running of a Quadruped Robot Driven by Pneumatic Muscle Actuators: An Experimental Study

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app12094146

Keywords

quadrupedal pace running; artificial muscle actuators; bio-inspired locomotion; two-level central pattern generators (CPG); leg loading feedback

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [18K11489]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18K11489] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The aim of this study is to design a neuromorphic locomotion controller for a prospective bioinspired quadruped robot. Through experiments, we find that leg loading feedback plays a positive role in stabilizing pace running, and it can autonomously determine an appropriate cycle.
Our goal is to design a neuromorphic locomotion controller for a prospective bioinspired quadruped robot driven by artificial muscle actuators. In this paper, we focus on achieving a running gait called a pace, in which the ipsilateral pairs of legs move in phase, while the two pairs together move out of phase, by a quadruped robot with realistic legs driven by pneumatic muscle actuators. The robot is controlled by weakly coupled two-level central pattern generators to generate a pace gait with leg loading feedback. Each leg is moved through four sequential phases like an animal, i.e., touch-down, stance, lift-off, and swing phases. We find that leg loading feedback to the central pattern generator can contribute to stabilizing pace running with an appropriate cycle autonomously determined by synchronizing each leg's oscillation with the roll body oscillation without a human specifying the cycle. The experimental results conclude that our proposed neuromorphic controller is beneficial for achieving pace running by a muscle-driven quadruped robot.

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