Design and Analysis of a Bio-Inspired Wire-Driven Multi-Section Flexible Robot

This paper presents a bio-inspired wire-driven multi-section flexible robot. It is inspired by the snake skeleton and octopus arm muscle arrangements. The robot consists of three sections and each section is made up of several identical vertebras, which are articulated by both spherical joints and a...

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Main Authors: Zheng Li, Ruxu Du
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-04-01
Series:International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5772/56025
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spelling doaj-5e926f3c691e46a6b567df95c7adc5592020-11-25T03:17:14ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems1729-88142013-04-011010.5772/5602510.5772_56025Design and Analysis of a Bio-Inspired Wire-Driven Multi-Section Flexible RobotZheng Li0Ruxu Du1 Institute of Precision Engineering, Dept. Mechanical & Automation Engineering, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China Institute of Precision Engineering, Dept. Mechanical & Automation Engineering, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, ChinaThis paper presents a bio-inspired wire-driven multi-section flexible robot. It is inspired by the snake skeleton and octopus arm muscle arrangements. The robot consists of three sections and each section is made up of several identical vertebras, which are articulated by both spherical joints and a flexible backbone. Each section is driven by two groups of wires, controlling the bending motion in X and Y directions. This design integrates the serpentine robots' structure and the continuum robots' actuation. As a result, it is more compact than traditional serpentine robots and has a higher positioning accuracy than typical continuum soft robots, such as OctArm V. A Kinematics model and a workspace model of the robot are developed based on the piece wise constant curvature assumption. To evaluate the design, a prototype is built and experiments are carried out. The average distal end positioning error is less than 4%. Characteristics of the wire-driven robot are also discussed, including the leverage effect and the manipulability under constraint. These features makes the proposed robot well suited to confined spaces, especially for working in minimally invasive surgery, nuclear reactor pipelines, disaster debris, etc.https://doi.org/10.5772/56025
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zheng Li
Ruxu Du
spellingShingle Zheng Li
Ruxu Du
Design and Analysis of a Bio-Inspired Wire-Driven Multi-Section Flexible Robot
International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
author_facet Zheng Li
Ruxu Du
author_sort Zheng Li
title Design and Analysis of a Bio-Inspired Wire-Driven Multi-Section Flexible Robot
title_short Design and Analysis of a Bio-Inspired Wire-Driven Multi-Section Flexible Robot
title_full Design and Analysis of a Bio-Inspired Wire-Driven Multi-Section Flexible Robot
title_fullStr Design and Analysis of a Bio-Inspired Wire-Driven Multi-Section Flexible Robot
title_full_unstemmed Design and Analysis of a Bio-Inspired Wire-Driven Multi-Section Flexible Robot
title_sort design and analysis of a bio-inspired wire-driven multi-section flexible robot
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
issn 1729-8814
publishDate 2013-04-01
description This paper presents a bio-inspired wire-driven multi-section flexible robot. It is inspired by the snake skeleton and octopus arm muscle arrangements. The robot consists of three sections and each section is made up of several identical vertebras, which are articulated by both spherical joints and a flexible backbone. Each section is driven by two groups of wires, controlling the bending motion in X and Y directions. This design integrates the serpentine robots' structure and the continuum robots' actuation. As a result, it is more compact than traditional serpentine robots and has a higher positioning accuracy than typical continuum soft robots, such as OctArm V. A Kinematics model and a workspace model of the robot are developed based on the piece wise constant curvature assumption. To evaluate the design, a prototype is built and experiments are carried out. The average distal end positioning error is less than 4%. Characteristics of the wire-driven robot are also discussed, including the leverage effect and the manipulability under constraint. These features makes the proposed robot well suited to confined spaces, especially for working in minimally invasive surgery, nuclear reactor pipelines, disaster debris, etc.
url https://doi.org/10.5772/56025
work_keys_str_mv AT zhengli designandanalysisofabioinspiredwiredrivenmultisectionflexiblerobot
AT ruxudu designandanalysisofabioinspiredwiredrivenmultisectionflexiblerobot
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