Fast ground-to-air transition with avian-inspired multifunctional legs
Won Dong Shin, Hoang-Vu Phan, Monica A. Daley, Auke J. Ijspeert, Dario, Floreano

TL;DR
This paper introduces RAVEN, a bird-inspired robot with multifunctional legs enabling rapid jumping, walking, and obstacle hopping, which enhances flight take-off efficiency and versatility in complex terrains.
Contribution
The study presents a novel multi-modal robotic leg design inspired by birds, overcoming the complexity-versatility tradeoff in aerial robots for diverse locomotion modes.
Findings
Jumping significantly increases initial flight speed.
Jumping is more energy-efficient than propeller-only take-off.
Leg mass investment correlates with terrestrial versus aerial adaptation.
Abstract
Most birds can navigate seamlessly between aerial and terrestrial environments. Whereas the forelimbs evolved into wings primarily for flight, the hindlimbs serve diverse functions such as walking, hopping, and leaping, and jumping take-off for transitions into flight. These capabilities have inspired engineers to aim for similar multi-modality in aerial robots, expanding their range of applications across diverse environments. However, challenges remain in reproducing multi-modal locomotion, across gaits with distinct kinematics and propulsive characteristics, such as walking and jumping, while preserving lightweight mass for flight. This tradeoff between mechanical complexity and versatility limits most existing aerial robots to only one additional locomotor mode. Here, we overcome the complexity-versatility tradeoff with RAVEN (Robotic Avian-inspired Vehicle for multiple…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAerospace Engineering and Energy Systems · Robotic Locomotion and Control · Biomimetic flight and propulsion mechanisms
