Improved Performance on Moving-Mass Hopping Robots with Parallel Elasticity
Eric Ambrose, Aaron D. Ames

TL;DR
This paper introduces a parallel spring in a moving-mass hopping robot, significantly enhancing energy efficiency, stability, and reducing actuator effort, demonstrated through simulation and experimental results.
Contribution
It presents a novel double-spring design and a trajectory optimization method, improving hopping performance without stabilizing controllers.
Findings
2.5x better energy efficiency with double-spring model
40% reduction in peak actuator force
Achieved 40cm hop heights experimentally
Abstract
Robotic Hopping is challenging from the perspective of both modeling the dynamics as well as the mechanical design due to the short period of ground contact in which to actuate on the world. Previous work has demonstrated stable hopping on a moving-mass robot, wherein a single spring was utilized below the body of the robot. This paper finds that the addition of a spring in parallel to the actuator greatly improves the performance of moving mass hopping robots. This is demonstrated through the design of a novel one-dimensional hopping robot. For this robot, a rigorous trajectory optimization method is developed using hybrid systems models with experimentally tuned parameters. Simulation results are used to study the effects of a parallel spring on energetic efficiency, stability and hopping effort. We find that the double-spring model had 2.5x better energy efficiency than the…
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