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Design of Compliant Climbing Feet. Alan Asbeck 9/14/04. Overview:. Definitions Claw attachment model Geometrical considerations Other design considerations Examples. Definitions. Claw. Axial direction. Toe. Foot. Wall. Normal direction. Claw Attachment Model. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Design of Compliant Climbing Feet
Alan Asbeck
9/14/04
Overview:
• Definitions
• Claw attachment model
• Geometrical considerations
• Other design considerations
• Examples
Definitions
WallNormal direction
Axial direction
ToeFoot
Claw
Claw Attachment Model
• Find appropriate compliances in the Normal and Axial directions
Sangbae's sticky system model
Substrate
Sticky element
Sticky structure
An element also has sticky system
Sticky system model (2)
1,3 : compression internal force2 : Detached element ( if Fi < k(Yi – h0) , where Fi is sticky force of sticky element)4: Zero internal force5: Tensile force ( Fi > k(Yi – h0))
F : external forcek : stiffness of structure (modulus)
1 2 3 4 5
F
h0
Yik
Claw Attachment Model:Normal Direction
= Asperity
• First, slide foot down wall until some claws have caught asperities
• Then, examine the forces in the normal direction.
Claw Attachment Model:Normal Direction
Attached clawUnattached claw
• Sticky system model: sticky elements "attach" to surface if they touch surface• Claw attachment model: claws must hook on surface asperities–some claws don't attach!
Claw attachment model vs. sticky system model
• Analysis is the same as in the sticky system model, EXCEPT that the unattached claws cannot attract the surface
• So, fewer elements stick to the wall, even while all elements push away from the wall
Attached elements must stick really well! (Have a large detachment force)
Design foot so as many elements attach as possible
Make foot very compliant in axial direction
Maximum sticky force vs structure stiffness
(Sangbae's results)
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 800
1
2
3
4
5
6x 10
5 Plot of Maximun sticky force vs elasticity
Stiffness(k)
Stic
ky f
orce
Claw attachment model: Axial direction
= Asperity
Attached claw acts like a spring
Unattached claw has no axial forces acting on it
Conclusions from Axial direction
Allow toes to stretch far enough that most toes catch asperities (recall normal direction conclusions)
• Distance necessary to stretch depends on asperity size
• Best if the load is equally shared between toes. make the compliance softer in the axial direction
Geometrical Considerations
• Center of Rotation for Normal, Axial compliances
• Claw angle change
Centers of Rotation
Away from the wall
At the wall Inside the wall (virtual)
= Center of Rotation
• There is a Center of Rotation (CoR) for the claws' normal compliance, and a second one for the axial compliance.
Some options for the Normal compliance CoR:
Normal CoR Force Analysis
Away from the wall
F
Motion away from the wall in response to force causes claw to disengage. Also, claw skips over wall before finding another asperity. BAD!
Inside the wall (virtual)
Since claw cannot go further into the wall, the center of rotation is forced down and out to increase the length. This pushes the NEIGHBORING toes away from the wall, since they are coupled through the rest of the foot. BAD!
F
Assumed loading strategy:• Push foot into wall until all toes touch wall• Pull foot down with our load
Normal CoR Force Analysis (2)
At the wall
Putting the center of rotation as close to the wall as possible minimizes antagonistic forces, since all forces are axial. No motion of toe occurs. Good!
F
Claw Angle Change
• Claw only attaches to wall for certain claw angles: if it is too shallow or too steep, it will not attach.
• So, prevent claw from rotating out of desired angle range
• Empirically: around Theta = 45-75 degrees from wall normal works well (but this should be further investigated). This is different than Will's results (45-60 degrees) because we are hooking asperities, not penetrating a surface.
Theta
Normal CoR cont'd
Close to claw Far from claw
Some more options:
• When the CoR is close to the claw, a large angle change occurs for a given normal displacement of the claw tip.
• Thus, having a CoR far from the claw is best (i.e. in the limit, the toe translates in the normal direction)
Application of Normal CoR principles
• If the toes are flexible near the claw, this will put the CoR very close to the claw.
F
Flexible
F
F
F Toe deforms from force. This causes the CoR to be quite close to claw.
Axial CoR
• Should be as far away from wall as possible (in the limit, just have translation)
• Practically should be at least 4-5+ cm away from wall for small vertical motions
• Matters when designing 4-bar linkages and flexures for the toes
Other Design Considerations
• Damping and Springiness
• Detaching from wall
Damping and Springiness• We care about the spring constant and damping
between the claw tip and the base of the toe• Matters in both axial and normal directions: often,
a claw will weakly grab a (bad) asperity, then break free after stretching a little. We want the claw to scrape against the wall as much as possible while looking for a new asperity. Skipping over stretches of wall is bad.
• Should be investigated more. I think that a low Q-factor is better, probably something critically damped. It seems like underdamped toes bounce more.
Detaching from WallTypical ways claws get stuck in wall:
Fdetachment
Entire claw gets stuck in a large deep hole – prevent by changing the claw design
Fdetachment
Tip of claw binds in a deep hole – prevent by pulling the claw out along its axis
Detaching from Wall (2)• Need to have some way of ensuring that
the claws are pulled out the same direction they were put in to the wall.
• Options: 1. Have a rigid toe and push the base of the toe
2. Pull the claw out from the back of the claw
Fdetachment
parallel to claw tip
rigidFdetachment
parallel to claw tip
not rigid
Examples!First, examples of stuff that didn't work and why:
• Normal Center of rotation way off wall• Both have good disengagement mechanisms
• Too compliant close to claw tip—normal center of rotation really close to claw, causing claw angle changes
This one is actually inside the wall
• Normal center of rotation slightly off wall• Probably too springy/not enough damping• No mechanism for disengagement
• 4-bar linkage-based designs would be good except they need to be really big, and tend to distort in undesired ways.
• Normal Center of Rotation very close to wall—good
• Very compliant in both normal and axial directions—good
• No mechanism for disengagement.. Bad!
Spider's foot(Close-up)
• Mechanism providing much compliance in the normal direction, like Sangbae's sticky model—good for sticking to surface
• BUT, Normal center of rotation far off wall – not good for hooking on asperities
Good examples
• Normal Center of Rotation very close to wall—good. ..maybe a little too close to claw
• Very compliant in both normal and axial directions—good
• Mechanism for disengagement (pull at back of claw)
• Normal Center of Rotation very close to wall, and pretty far back—good.
•Axial Center of Rotation is infinitely far back because of tube mechanism
• Not so compliant in both normal and axial directions (currently being improved)
• Mechanism for disengagement (rigid toes)
The End
(finally)
Detaching from Wall (3)
• Original Spinybot's claws disengaged abruptly from all wall surfaces, even when attempts were made to pull parallel to the claw tips. Why?
• Possibilities:– On a very small scale, the tip of the claw was binding
in a small (deep) hole– Actually weren't pulling parallel to claw tips—maybe
some changed angles or the legs didn't pull in the correct direction
– ???
• Abrupt disengagement causes the robot to shake and jostle the other attached feet