Overshoot intrusion forces promote robophysical bipedal walking on homogenous granular media

ORAL

Abstract

Bipedal walking on natural terrain such as sand and loose rubble is challenging because deformable terrains complicate foot-terrain interaction (modelled as rigid contact on hard ground). To discover how deformable ground interaction influences bipedal walking, we study constant center-of-mass height dynamic walking of a flat-footed bipedal robophysical device (40cm tall, 3 motors per leg) on homogeneous granular terrain of loosely packed poppy seeds. The planarized robot is controlled such that its zero-moment point (ZMP) stays within a stability region (termed support polygon for hard ground walking). Granular resistive force theory [Li et al, Science 2013] fails to predict this stability region despite success in predicting performance of multi-legged robots on granular media. We posit that the stability region formulation requires understanding of static reaction forces; we estimate these effects by measuring forces on a flat plate (3cmx3cm) vertically plunged (at $\approx 1$ cm/second) into loosely packed poppy seeds with controlled pauses during the intrusion. Following a pause ($\approx 3$ second), the force overshoots 13\%-38\% to that of continuous intrusion at depths from 45mm-5mm. The overshoot forces rationalize the stability regions and enable robust bipedal walking.

Authors

  • Xiaobin Xiong

    • Georgia Inst of Tech
  • Jeffrey Aguilar

    • Georgia Inst of Tech
  • Jennifer Rieser

    • Georgia Institute of Technology
    • Georgia Inst of Tech
  • Allison Kim

    • Georgia Inst of Tech
    • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Aaron Ames

    • Georgia Inst of Tech
    • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Daniel Goldman

    • Georgia Institute of Technology
    • Georgia Inst of Tech
    • GeorgiaTech