Sinkage Study in Granular Material for Space Exploration Legged Robot Gripper
Arthur Candalot, James Hurrell, Malik Manel Hashim, Brigid Hickey,, Mickael Laine, Kazuya Yoshida

TL;DR
This study investigates the sinkage behavior of an underactuated soft gripper on granular lunar soil, developing a simulation model to predict sinkage and improve legged robot mobility in soft terrains for space exploration.
Contribution
The paper introduces a validated simulation model for gripper sinkage in granular material, aiding in the design and control of lunar legged robots.
Findings
Simulation accurately predicts gripper sinkage in granular media.
Model can be integrated into robot control algorithms for better mobility.
Experimental validation confirms the model's reliability.
Abstract
Wheeled rovers have been the primary choice for lunar exploration due to their speed and efficiency. However, deeper areas, such as lunar caves and craters, require the mobility of legged robots. To do so, appropriate end effectors must be designed to enable climbing and walking on the granular surface of the Moon. This paper investigates the behavior of an underactuated soft gripper on deformable granular material when a legged robot is walking in soft soil. A modular test bench and a simulation model were developed to observe the gripper sinkage behavior under load. The gripper uses tendon-driven fingers to match its target shape and grasp on the target surface using multiple micro-spines. The sinkage of the gripper in silica sand was measured by comparing the axial displacement of the gripper with the nominal load of the robot mass. Multiple experiments were performed to observe the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSoil Mechanics and Vehicle Dynamics · Planetary Science and Exploration · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
