The Challenge of Ant Sized Robots is coming at 02/19/2019 - 10:00am

Rogers 226
Tue, 02/19/2019 - 10:00am

Ryan St. Pierre
Post-Doctoral Researcher, Carnegie Mellon University

Abstract:
The highly dynamic mobility of insects inspires an entire field of
microrobotics, with future visions of ubiquitous small-scale robots. However,
current microrobots pale in comparison to insects not only in mobility and
application capabilities, but overall in autonomy. Insects take advantage of
their muscles as actuators, neural systems for control, mechanisms from
multiple materials, and a variety of sensors to accomplish tasks. This leads
to driving questions (1) what enables highly dynamic mobility, and ultimately
autonomy, in insects and (2) how can we apply lessons learned about insects
to small-scale robots that are inherently resource constrained?

To begin answering these questions, physical, robotic models are utilized as
reduced parameter analogs to biological systems. An experimental platform and
robots are presented to study locomotion that is scalable and adaptable for
different robot designs from 1 g to 1 mg. Experimental data is coupled with
numerical models to begin understanding the role of legs and material choice
as robots scale down in size. Multiple materials enable dynamic behaviors in
insects, while robots can use material to program desired behaviors. Bringing
together experimental robotic platforms, biological system insights, and
computation models, this work points toward directions to enable future
autonomy in microrobotics platforms.

Bio:

Read more: http://eecs.oregonstate.edu/colloquium/challenge-ant-sized-robots 
[1]


[1] http://eecs.oregonstate.edu/colloquium/challenge-ant-sized-robots
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