Advanced turning maneuver of a multi-legged robot using pitchfork bifurcation
Shinya Aoi, Ryoe Tomatsu, Yuki Yabuuchi, Daiki Morozumi, Kota Okamoto,, Soichiro Fujiki, Kei Senda, Kazuo Tsuchiya

TL;DR
This paper explores how pitchfork bifurcation can be used to control the turning maneuver of a multi-legged robot, introducing a new dynamic instability-based approach for improved maneuverability.
Contribution
It introduces a novel control method based on pitchfork bifurcation, enabling curved walking and superior turning performance in a 12-legged robot with flexible body axis.
Findings
Pitchfork bifurcation induces transition to curved walk.
The new controller improves turning maneuverability.
Dynamic instability facilitates rapid movement changes.
Abstract
Legged robots have excellent terrestrial mobility for traversing diverse environments and thus have the potential to be deployed in a wide variety of scenarios. However, they are susceptible to falling and leg malfunction during locomotion. Although the use of a large number of legs can overcome these problems, it makes the body long and leads to many legs being constrained to contact with the ground to support the long body, which impedes maneuverability. To improve the locomotion maneuverability of such robots, the present study focuses on dynamic instability, which induces rapid and large movement changes, and uses a 12-legged robot with a flexible body axis. Our previous work found that the straight walk of the robot becomes unstable through Hopf bifurcation when the body axis flexibility is changed, which induces body undulations. Furthermore, we developed a simple controller based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRobotic Locomotion and Control · Biomimetic flight and propulsion mechanisms · Prosthetics and Rehabilitation Robotics
