Robo-roach squeezes through tight spaces

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Offline Kazi Taufiqur Rahman

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Robo-roach squeezes through tight spaces
« on: November 23, 2015, 11:52:09 PM »
Cluttered terrain won’t block this cockroach-bot. Its sleek, rounded shell lets the new six-legged robot scurry through tight spaces.

Known as a robo-roach, it’s short and squat. It sort of resembles a clunky smartphone with legs. Such a bulky body poses few problems when trekking over flat surfaces. But it can get stuck when it travels between upright features. Bots tend to bump into these obstacles — unless it’s wearing a roach-style shell.
Chen Li works at the University of California, Berkeley. There, he has been designing mobile robots to navigate through complex ground-based environments. These might include anything from a forest, field or building to a disaster site. Li describes this field of research as terradynamics, a term that merges the idea of terrain and movements. Akin to aerodynamics, the science of things moving through air, this field develops machines to move across the ground.

For their new study, Li and his team added an arched plastic shell to their clunky robot. Its streamlined top now resembles an insect — think cockroach. Developing devices that mimic living organisms is known as biomimetics or biomimicry. The shell lets the bot wiggle through a maze of paper strips that stood upright like blades of grass. What’s more, like real roaches, the shell-wearing bot can “body roll,” flip sideways to shimmy through gaps.

Streamlining robots might prove a simple way to help machines hike through natural environments — like a forest floor littered with grass, shrubs and fungi, Li’s team now suggests.
Kazi Taufiqur Rahman
Senior Lecturer, EEE

Offline saikat07

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Re: Robo-roach squeezes through tight spaces
« Reply #1 on: November 20, 2016, 11:29:42 PM »
Thanks for sharing
Senior Lecturer,
Department Of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Faculty of Engineering,
Daffodil International University.